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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Game Birds and Game Fishes of the Pacific
+Coast, by Harry Thom Payne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Game Birds and Game Fishes of the Pacific Coast
+
+Author: Harry Thom Payne
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2011 [EBook #38032]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GAME BIRDS AND GAME FISHES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas, Joseph Cooper and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ GAME BIRDS
+
+ AND
+
+ GAME FISHES
+
+ OF THE
+
+ PACIFIC COAST
+
+
+ _BY_
+
+ H. T. PAYNE
+
+
+ [Illustration: shell]
+
+
+ Illustrated with Half-tones from Photographs of
+ Live and Carefully Mounted
+ Birds and Fishes.
+
+ With Ready Reference Diagrams of Each Family,
+ Giving the Scientific and Common Names
+ of Each Genus and Species, Their
+ Relationship, Breeding Grounds
+ and General Range.
+
+ NEWS PUBLISHING CO., Los Angeles.
+
+
+
+
+ Copyrighted 1913, Under Act of Congress,
+ By H. T. Payne
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+Laws recently enacted by most of the states for the better protection
+of the game, imposing a nominal license for the privilege of hunting
+it, have enabled us to take a census, as it were, of that vast number
+of the American people who enjoy the health-giving sports of the
+field. This census reveals the fact, that, of the whole population of
+the Pacific Coast, nearly twenty per cent of all those over fifteen
+years of age are licensed sportsmen. Add to these the large number of
+anglers, not counted in this enumeration, and the rapidly increasing
+number of young ladies who are learning to enjoy the exhilarating
+sports of the field and stream, and this percentage will be
+appreciably increased. It is, therefore, obvious that a study of the
+game birds and game fishes must be one of interest to a very large
+portion of our people, and especially to the younger generation whose
+knowledge of the game they bring to bag is still in the formative
+state.
+
+Unlike all other works treating of the birds and fishes, this one is
+written from the standpoint of the practical sportsman and angler,
+rather than for the student of ornithology or ichthyology. I have,
+therefore avoided the use of technical names as much as possible, and
+employed in the description of the various species the plainest
+language consistent with a clear understanding of their distinguishing
+features. I have, however, for the benefit of those who wish to learn
+their scientific names and genetic relationship, added after the
+description of the members of each family, a tabulated form, giving
+the Order, Family, Subfamily and Genus to which the several species
+belong; together with their common names, general range and breeding
+grounds. A new and convenient feature of ready reference.
+
+The numerous illustrations, which are from photographs of the actual
+birds, is a new feature of great importance to the student, as they
+give the perfect markings of every feather, and the true gradation of
+color as appearing in nature.
+
+That, by placing within the reach of the younger generation of
+sportsmen, such knowledge of the game birds and game fishes as I have
+gained through more than half a century spent in their pursuit, may,
+in a measure, liquidate the deep debt I owe for the many happy hours
+and excellent health drawn from the exhilarating sports of the field
+and stream, is the earnest wish of
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Taxonomy of Birds]
+
+
+
+
+THE GAME BIRDS OF THE PACIFIC COAST
+
+
+In describing the game birds of the Pacific Coast, I have included all
+those found in any considerable numbers from the British Columbia
+line, south to and including the state of Arizona, the Mexican states
+of Sonora and Chihuahua and the peninsula of Lower California, for in
+some of these less frequented places, game birds are found in great
+numbers and great variety. This is especially true in these southern
+sections with the quail, for here its voice is heard in all the notes
+of the gamut, from the soft, turkey-like call of the mountain species,
+the soul-stirring whistle of the bobwhite, or the sharp, decisive
+"can't see me" of the valley quail, through all the varied changes of
+the blue quail family, to the low plaintive note of the massena quail
+of Mexico.
+
+While it is not the purpose of this work to give a scientific
+classification of the game birds of which it treats, a brief statement
+of the manner in which they are grouped and classified by the
+ornithologist will materially assist the reader in the study of those
+species herein mentioned.
+
+The ornithologist groups all the birds of North America into seventeen
+"Orders"; each of these including all birds of a similar nature. Some
+of these orders are divided into two or more suborders, where, while
+clearly belonging to the order, there is yet a sufficient difference
+in certain groups of families to justify this further separation. The
+next division is the "family," which is again divided into "genera,"
+and each "genus" into "species."
+
+Of the seventeen orders of American birds, the scope of this work
+includes only six; for all of the birds, commonly called game birds,
+belong to one or the other of the following orders:
+
+The =Gallinae=--All gallinaceous, or chicken-like birds. Of this order
+we only have to consider two families: The =Tetraonidae=, composed of
+the quail and grouse, and the =Phasianidae=, composed of the turkeys
+and pheasants.
+
+The =Anseres=--Lamellirostral, or soft-billed swimmers, such as the
+ducks, geese, swans and mergansers, comprising the one family,
+=Anatidae=, which is divided into five subfamilies, with four of which
+we are concerned, viz.: The =Anatinae=, the fresh-water ducks; the
+=Fuligulinae=, the salt-water ducks; the =Anserinae=, the geese and
+brant; and the =Cygninae=, the swans.
+
+The =Columbae=--This order has but one family, the =Columbidae=,
+composed of the pigeons and doves.
+
+The =Limicolae=--This order has seven families, only three of which I
+have mentioned as being of sufficient interest to the sportsmen of the
+Pacific Coast to justify a description of them. These are the
+=Recurvirostridae=, composed of the stilts and avocets; the
+=Scolopacidae=, the snipes, curlews, yellow-legs, willits, marlins,
+sandpipers, etc.; and the =Charadridae=, the plovers.
+
+The other two orders, the =Herodiones= and the =Paludicolae=, the first
+composed largely of the herons, storks, ibises, and egrets, and the
+latter of the cranes, rails gallinules and coots, afford more pleasure
+to the sportsman through their stately appearance on his hunting
+grounds than as game birds. The coots, however, are not considered
+game by our sportsmen.
+
+It is well to state here also, that ornithologists do not always agree
+in the classification and nomenclature of birds. One claiming that a
+certain species or genus should be separated, while others insist that
+there is no reason for such separation. With the one exception of the
+California valley quail, I have followed the plan of the American
+Ornithologists' Union. In this exception I have followed such good
+authorities as Bonapart, Elliott, Ridgeway and Gambel, and given the
+California valley quail the generic name of =Lophortyx=, instead of
+classing them with the Callipepla, to which belong the scaled quail, a
+species with no distinction between the sexes.
+
+
+THE QUAIL
+
+While the eastern half of the continent has but one genus of quail,
+the Pacific Coast, including Mexico, is well supplied with five genera
+and eighteen species, to which may be added four subspecies. Nine
+species of the genus, =Colinus=, however, and two of the genus,
+=Callipepla=, do not come into the United States.
+
+Properly speaking we have no quail in America, all of our so-called
+quail being partridges, but the use of the word "quail" has become so
+common that these birds will, in all probability, be known as quail
+for all time. But whatever the name, they are resourceful beyond
+comparison, and gamy to the fullest degree; affording with dog and
+gun the most enjoyable of all out-door sport.
+
+
+ [Illustration: MOUNTAIN QUAIL PLUMED QUAIL
+ (Oreortyx pictus) (Oreortyx pictus plumiferus)]
+
+
+THE MOUNTAIN QUAIL
+
+(Oreortyx pictus)
+
+The mountain quails are the largest and most beautiful of all the
+American quails, though the least hunted and the least gamy. There is
+but one genus, with one species and two subspecies. Two of these
+inhabit the mountains of California and Oregon, and the third, the
+high ranges of the peninsula of Lower California. While most of the
+sportsmen of the Pacific Coast are conversant with the general
+character and coloration of the mountain quail, I believe but few of
+them have ever seen the more beautiful species that inhabit the San
+Pedro Martir mountains of Lower California.
+
+The present species, given the English name of mountain partridge, by
+the ornithologists, and which he has taken for his type, is a small
+race found only on the Coast Range from the Bay of San Francisco north
+into Oregon, and, therefore, never reaches the high altitudes reached
+by its near relatives, the =Oreortyx pictus plumiferus=, to which the
+English name, plumed partridge, has been given. In fact, both of these
+varieties are plumed, though that of the latter is a trifle the
+longer. The fact that the plumed quail ascends the mountains each
+spring to heights of from five to eight thousand feet for nesting
+purposes, gives it a better claim to the name, mountain, than has the
+other variety.
+
+The present species, the mountain quail, is generally found in the
+canyons and on the damp hill-sides where ferns are abundant. They have
+very little of the migratory habits of the other species, except when
+driven down in the winter by the snows. Their habits and general plan
+of coloration are so much like those of the other two species that I
+shall describe them all together, with the proper mention of wherein
+they differ.
+
+
+THE PLUMED QUAIL
+
+(Oreortyx pictus plumiferus)
+
+The range of the plumed partridge is throughout the entire length of the
+Sierra Nevadas and of the coast range south of San Francisco bay into
+Lower California, where it intergrades with the San Pedro partridge,
+but it does not cross the Colorado river and enter Arizona or the
+mainland of Mexico. This species begins its migrations early in the
+spring, keeping close to the snow line until they reach altitudes as
+high as 7000 to 8000 feet, where they nest and rear their young. In the
+fall, just before the winter rains begin, they commence their migrations
+down again to the foothills, where they remain until the following
+spring. Unless driven by unusually heavy snows, they rarely descend
+lower than 2000 to 3000 feet above sea level.
+
+
+SAN PEDRO MARTIR MOUNTAIN QUAIL
+
+(Oreortyx pictus confinis)
+
+The San Pedro partridge, so named by the ornithologist, is a resident
+of the San Pedro Martir mountains of Lower California, and ascends to
+a height of ten thousand feet, and is rarely seen lower than five
+thousand feet above the sea.
+
+I want to say here that no work on ornithology that I have seen,
+describes the San Pedro partridge properly. Most likely this is the
+result of an examination of the intergrades only, for they do
+intergrade with the California species to the northward. The two
+species first mentioned have the plume from one and a half to two and
+a half inches long and nearly round in form. The plume of the San
+Pedro partridge is flat, about three-sixteenths of an inch wide and
+from three and a half to four and a half inches long. The plume of the
+other varieties is erectile, but that of the San Pedro denizen is soft
+and falls down the side. In all species both sexes are alike, with the
+exception that the plume of the female is generally a trifle the
+shorter; but this can not always be relied upon to distinguish the
+sex.
+
+Generally speaking there is not much sport in hunting the mountain
+quail, but I have at times had a bevy scattered in ferns, and in such
+cases had very good sport with them with a dog, and found them to lie
+very well. They are about a half larger than the valley quail, and as
+a table bird much more succulent.
+
+=Color=--Top of head, back of neck and breast, an ashy blue, darker on
+the back of the neck than the breast; back and wings, inclining to
+olive brown, in the Coast species with a slight reddish tinge; abdomen
+and flanks, rich chestnut barred with black and white; under tail
+feathers, black; entire throat, reaching well down onto the breast,
+rich chestnut, bordered with white; chin, white; bill, black. The two
+California species have two round, black plumes falling gracefully
+over the back of the neck, but erectile when excited. These plumes
+will vary from one and a half to two and a half inches in length. The
+Lower California species have two flat, black plumes about
+three-sixteenths of an inch in width and from three and a half to five
+inches long. Both sexes are alike in all species.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest, like that of all gallinaceous birds, is a
+depression on the ground, hidden among a bunch of bushes or under a
+log, surrounded by a few dry leaves. The number of eggs will average
+about a dozen, rather oval in shape and of a light ochreous color.
+
+=Measurements=--Length (see diagram), will average about 10 inches;
+wing 5-1/2, bill about 5/8 of an inch.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CALIFORNIA VALLEY QUAIL
+ (Lophortyx californicus vallicola)]
+
+
+THE CALIFORNIA VALLEY QUAIL
+
+(Lophortyx californicus vallicola)
+
+There are two varieties of the California valley quail. They are
+distinguished not so much by the slight difference in color as in the
+very marked difference in their habits.
+
+As with the mountain quail the ornithologist has taken the wrong bird
+for the type, making the larger race the subspecies. To the species
+(=Lophortyx californicus=) inhabiting the foothills of the Coast range
+north of the bay of San Francisco and into western Oregon, the
+ornithologist has given the English name California partridge. This
+species is a lover of damp places and rank growths of underbrush and
+ferns. The subspecies (=Lophortyx californicus vallicola=), to which
+has been given the name valley partridge, ranges from central Oregon
+throughout the great valleys of California, the foothills of the
+western slope of the Sierras, both sides of the Coast range south from
+San Francisco bay and throughout the peninsula of Lower California.
+Like the mountain quail it does not cross the Colorado desert into
+Arizona or the mainland of Mexico. Nevertheless it has a wider range
+than any other one species of game bird.
+
+Of all the game birds of America the California valley quail is the
+most resourceful and characterized by the greatest cunning. Having
+hunted these birds for upward of fifty years and practically
+throughout their entire range, I freely give them credit for knowing
+more tricks and being able to concoct more schemes of deception than
+all the rest of the =tetraonidae= combined, and this resourcefulness
+has led to most of the false statements regarding their behavior and
+gameness. It has been said by writers, who should know better, that a
+dog is no use in hunting them because of their disposition to run. Any
+bird with more game than a fool-hen will either flush or run where
+there is no undercover in which to hide, and the valley quail being so
+often found in dry, open places or chaparral devoid of undercover,
+will either flush or run until it finds suitable hiding grounds.
+
+But give the valley quail cover in which to hide and it can and will
+out-hide any game bird except the Montezuma quail of Mexico. In fact it
+is this remarkable faculty of hugging the ground until it is almost
+stepped upon that has led, more than anything else, to its false
+reputation as a runner. The man who hunts the valley quail without a
+dog--and most of its detractors do--can walk through a patch of good
+cover with a hundred birds scattered in it for an hour or more and not
+get up a half dozen. Unlike the bobwhite or the Montezuma quail of
+Mexico, the valley quail bunches in the fall. These bunches will
+contain anywhere from two or three broods to two or three hundred
+individuals, and sometimes even thousands, and they seem to understand
+that the larger the bunch the greater the necessity for avoiding
+pursuit. They are fond of the open places and the bare hill-tops and
+when driven from these, being a brush bird, they very naturally seek
+the brush. If there is no grass or suitable undercover in which to
+hide they will continue to work their way through it or double back on
+their pursuers until hiding places are found, when they will hug the
+ground so closely that even a good dog must pass reasonably near to
+them before he will detect their scent. The man who hunts without a
+dog generally passes through the cover into which his bevy has
+settled, continues his walk for a mile or more, then sits down,
+filling the air with a sulphurous streak of strong sounding words as
+he curses the game little birds for running, while the resourceful
+little fellows, closely hid, laugh over the security a false
+reputation has given them.
+
+There has been a great deal written about the ability of quail to
+withhold their scent, and many theories have been advanced. That all
+game birds do lose their scent temporarily while passing rapidly
+through the air I believe to be true, and the valley quail has this
+faculty strongly added to its other resources. This too often deceives
+the inexperienced man even when hunting with a dog. Where birds have
+been flushed into good cover and can not be raised, sit down and take
+a smoke, if you like, for twenty minutes or half an hour, then cast in
+your dog and you will be rewarded with point after point, where before
+your dog failed to detect the slightest scent. After years of
+experience with all of the upland birds of the United States and half
+of Mexico, I do not hesitate to pronounce the California quail the
+chief of them all in gameness, in resourcefulness, and in its general
+adaptability to furnish the highest form of upland shooting. But
+California quail can not be hunted successfully without a good dog.
+
+The food of the adult California quail, according to an investigation
+made by the United States Agricultural Department, through the
+examination of the stomachs of 619 birds, taken during every month of
+the year, except May, consists of 97 per cent vegetable and 3 per cent
+animal matter, the vegetable varying according to the seasons. During
+the rainy season, when green vegetation is abundant, grasses and
+foliage of various kinds form fully 80 per cent of the entire food,
+while in the dry season it forms barely one per cent. In the dry
+season weed seeds form as high as 85 per cent of the food; one stomach
+examined containing 2144 seeds of various kinds. During the harvesting
+season when there is a good deal of grain on the ground, and during
+the sowing season, grains form about 6 per cent of the diet. During
+the season when wild blackberries, elder and other wild berries are
+ripe, these, with a few grapes and a little of some other fruits, form
+23 per cent of the food.
+
+During the first week of the life of the young birds, insects of
+various kinds make up 75 per cent of their food, but by the time they
+are a month old their animal food is no greater than that of the old
+birds.
+
+=Color=--Male--Forehead, gray; top and back of head, sooty black,
+bordered with white running around from one eye to the other, and this
+again has a faint edging of black; throat, black, margined with white;
+plume, narrow at the base and wide at the top, consisting of six
+black, V-shaped feathers, each folded within the other and curved
+forward; back and sides of the neck to the shoulders, deep ashy blue
+with the feathers margined with black. Back and wings, bluish brown;
+primaries, or longest wing feathers, dark brown; breast, deep ashy
+blue, shading into a dirty buff at the lower part of the abdomen;
+flanks, dirty brown with white markings.
+
+The northern coast species are darker with more of an olive tinge.
+But all the markings are the same.
+
+Female--The female resembles the male in general color, but without
+the black head and throat. The plume is dirty brown, about half the
+length of the male's and nearly straight.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest consists of a depression in the ground
+carefully hid away in some bunch of grass or brush, and usually
+contains from fifteen to twenty very light buff or white eggs, often
+faintly speckled.
+
+=Measurements=--Length, eight to nine inches; wing, 4-1/2; tail, 4;
+bill, 1/2.
+
+
+ [Illustration: GAMBEL QUAIL OR ARIZONA QUAIL (Lophortyx gambeli)]
+
+
+THE GAMBEL QUAIL
+
+(Lophortyx gambeli)
+
+The gambel partridge occupies a unique position in its common
+nomenclature. In California it is known as the Arizona quail, while
+the sportsmen of Arizona refer to it as the California quail. In this,
+too, they both have good reasons for the names used, for these birds
+are found on both sides of the Colorado river, that is in both Arizona
+and California. Commencing in the Mexican state of Sonora, where they
+are found from the western slope of the Sierra Madre mountains to the
+Gulf of California, the range of the species extends northward and
+eastward through western Arizona, and, crossing the Colorado river
+onto the desert of the same name, passes through southeastern
+California into southern and central Nevada and Utah. The gambel quail
+belongs to the same genus as the two species of the California valley
+quail and in general appearance resembles them.
+
+The gambel quail is emphatically a desert bird, able to live through
+the long, dry seasons without water. If there are any trees in its
+neighborhood it will seek them for roosting purposes, but it is found
+distributed over vast sections where even the smallest brush is very
+scattering and under cover nearly quite if not entirely absent, yet in
+such places this member of the resourceful blue quail family protects
+itself from hawks and predatory animals with an astonishing success.
+The gambel quail is a true runner and can develop an astonishing speed
+for so small a bird. A very large part of the unwarranted reputation
+of the California valley quail as a runner is derived from confounding
+it with the gambel and the habit of the Arizona sportsmen of calling
+the gambel the California quail, but even as great runners as the
+gambel quail are, I have found them to lie well to the dog in the
+heavy bunch-grass sections of southeastern California and southern
+Nevada. I have also had fine sport with them along the bottoms of the
+Colorado river, where they are to be found in abundance.
+
+The food is practically the same as the California valley quail.
+
+=Color=--The general color of the upper parts and the breast is
+lighter and more of an ashy blue than the valley quail, but in its
+markings the gambel is the more conspicuous and more brilliant. The
+black throat, bordered with white, the gray forehead and the forward
+turned plume are common to both, but the top of the head of the gambel
+is a bright cinnamon red, while that of the valley quail is a sooty
+brown. The flanks of the gambel are conspicuously marked with bright
+chestnut brown with each feather with a narrow central stripe of
+white.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--Are the same in this species as in the valley quail.
+
+=Measurements=--Same as the valley quail.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SCALED QUAIL (Callipepla squamata)]
+
+
+THE SCALED QUAIL
+
+(Callipepla squamata)
+
+Next in geographical order is the scaled quail of Arizona and northern
+Mexico generally. This, too, is a desert bird which I have seen in
+great numbers at least twenty-five miles from the nearest water. It is
+the only member of the quail family where there is no difference in
+the markings of the sexes, except the mountain quail. In the open
+country it, too, is a runner, though it can not begin to develop the
+speed of the gambel nor will it continue to run for such long
+distances.
+
+During a residence of a year in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico, where
+I was developing some mining property, I found the scaled quail in
+great numbers all around me. Very few of the Mexican people are wing
+shots and few hunt except for the resulting meat. Little attention,
+therefore, is paid to the quail, and in the section where I was
+located I do not believe that even the "oldest inhabitant" of the
+quail settlement had ever heard the report of a shotgun. I had with me
+a brace of English setters, and these birds, though found among chino
+grama grass and low maguey plant, which offered splendid opportunities
+for hiding, not only tried my patience to the limit, but that of my
+dogs as well, by deliberately walking about twenty-five to thirty
+paces in front of me without the least thought of either hiding or
+taking to wing. By firing a couple of shots over them each morning I
+soon educated them to flush at the sight of me. In a couple of weeks
+they behaved very well and furnished me with good sport, hiding
+readily and lying good for the dogs.
+
+Most of the game birds need more or less educating before they fully
+meet the requirements of the sportsmen. Most, too, of the complaints
+that sportsmen make regarding the bad behavior of certain species of
+game or birds of certain sections should be charged to the lack on the
+part of the hunter of a knowledge of their habits rather than to the
+ill manners of the birds. One will often hear it said that certain men
+are lucky hunters and can not help staggering onto their game. Such
+men are lucky because they make a close study of the ways of the birds
+of each separate character of country. Knowing the places in which
+they will most likely be found feeding, they approach them from such
+directions as will have a tendency to drive them into the desired
+cover. A great deal of the annoyance of running birds, I have found,
+can be avoided by a careful study of their habits and proper
+management in handling them, and this is especially true of the scaled
+quail.
+
+=Color=--The back, the wings and tail coverts are a
+light, ashy blue, but the feathers of the shoulders, breast and
+abdomen are margined with dark brown, with a yellowish arrow-shaped
+central spot which gives them the appearance of scales. Its throat is
+a very faint buff, and instead of the plume of the genus Lophortyx it
+has a broad erectile crest with the feathers tipped with white. Both
+sexes are alike.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nesting habits are the same as those of the other
+species of the blue quail family, but the eggs are more of a buff and
+generally more speckled with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--About the same as the valley quail.
+
+
+THE CHESTNUT-BELLIED SCALE QUAIL
+
+(Callipepla squamata castaneigastra)
+
+The chestnut-bellied scaled quail is a subspecies of the scaled quail
+just described. They are not numerous and hardly enter the territory
+covered by this work. Intergrades of the two species are occasionally
+found in northern Mexico and possibly in southeastern Arizona. In
+general appearance they resemble the former species, being, however, a
+little darker and with a strong chestnut blotch on the belly.
+
+
+ [Illustration: ELEGANT QUAIL (Callipepla elegans)]
+
+
+THE ELEGANT QUAIL
+
+(Callipepla elegans)
+
+Along the western slope of the Sierra Madre range in the state of
+Sonora, Mexico, is to be found another member of the blue quail family
+whose habits appeal strongly to the sportsman. This species, known as
+the elegant quail, is one of the most handsomely marked of the group.
+From the blending of the white throat of the bobwhite with the black
+one of the gambel, and the brown of the back of the one with the blue
+of the other, together with a marked resemblance in its call to that
+of the bobwhite, suggests the possibility of its origin having
+resulted from a cross of the two genera. I may add that both the
+gambel and a species of the =Collinus=, bobwhite, are found in this
+same section.
+
+The elegant quail is generally found in and around the cultivated
+fields which they seem to prefer to the open country. While the
+elegant quail will walk leisurely in front of their pursuer until too
+closely approached, they can in no sense be termed runners. When
+flushed they take to cover and lie closely. Like all the quail of
+Mexico they have been hunted but little and need to be well scared
+before they become properly educated to the gun. After a few days'
+hunting I found them a very satisfactory game bird. Being found around
+the fields, the grounds and cover were all that could be desired for
+excellent sport.
+
+=Color=--Male--Plume straight, upright feathers about an inch and a
+quarter to an inch and a half in length, varying in color--possibly on
+account of age--from a light lemon to a dark reddish orange. The
+throat is finely mottled with small black and white dots, giving it a
+dark gray appearance. The general color of the back and the wing and
+tail coverts is a dark blue with about half of the exposed portion of
+each feather tipped with a bright, rich brown. The breast and abdomen
+is a light, ashy blue, profusely flecked with large, circular white
+spots.
+
+Female--The plume is about two-thirds the length of that of the male,
+brown in color and barred with black. The breast and abdomen are
+spotted like the male but the back is much the color of the English
+snipe.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The same as the other species of the blue quail.
+
+=Measurements=--Same as the valley quail.
+
+
+ [Illustration: MASSENA QUAIL (Cyrtonyx montezuma)]
+
+
+THE MASSENA OR MONTEZUMA QUAIL
+
+(Cyrtonyx Montezuma)
+
+The Massena, or Montezuma quail, is a distinct genus from the blue
+quail family. In many respects it resembles the bobwhite in color,
+though far more fancifully marked. It is also nearly one-half larger,
+though in some parts of Arizona and in New Mexico there is a smaller
+species of the same genus known as fool quail. The Mexican bird is far
+from a fool, and although it roosts on the ground like the bobwhite,
+it is resourceful enough to take care of itself in a country where
+vermin of all kinds are very plentiful. Its range is from near the
+northern boundary south through the larger portion of Mexico.
+
+The Montezuma quail is emphatically a grass bird and inhabits the
+grassy foothills and the cultivated fields, where it affords fine
+sport with a dog. It is very cosmopolitan as to climate, for it is
+found at altitudes of from five to six thousand feet, where
+considerable snow falls, as well as in the foothills of the hot,
+tropical valleys of the lowlands, and thrives equally well in all
+sections. It is a bird of peculiar habits. When startled by the
+approach of an enemy the bevy at once huddles together, where the
+birds remain motionless until they are approached to within from one
+to four feet, according to the cover they are in. If they think that
+they have not been seen or that the object of their alarm is going to
+pass by, there is not the slightest motion made by any one of them,
+but when they decide to take wing for safety every bird in perfect
+unison springs into the air to a height of about six feet and darts
+rapidly away. They are quick on the wing and seem able to carry away a
+good deal of shot. The flight generally is not more than one hundred
+yards, and when they alight they scatter well and will then out-hide
+any bird that lives. I have both ridden and walked, without a dog, for
+hours through a country where they were plentiful without seeing a
+bird, except where I chanced to nearly step upon them, yet with a dog
+I have found on the same grounds probably an average of fifteen bevies
+to the square mile. For work with a dog I prefer them to any bird I
+have ever hunted. They give out a strong scent, for points on bevies
+of from six to fifteen birds, made thirty to forty yards away are no
+uncommon occurrence. Then when you walk in front of your dog they
+never flush until you have almost stepped upon them. A scattered bevy
+will lie securely hid until each individual is flushed. Unlike the
+blue quail they never gather in large flocks, but always remain in
+single broods until broken up in the spring for nesting purposes.
+
+=Color=--Male--The head of these birds have a very bizarre appearance
+whose strange black and white markings seem to have no more purpose or
+design than the black and white chalk marks on a clown's face. The
+head of the male is crested with semi-erectile feathers in the shape
+of a broad hood of dark yellowish brown color, falling about half way
+down the neck; groundwork of the back and of the wing and tail coverts
+is a dark ocher barred with a deep rich brown; breast and flanks are
+nearly black, dotted with large white spots, and from the throat to
+the vent is a stripe about five-eighths of an inch wide of a dark rich
+chestnut.
+
+=Female=--The female, with the exception of the white dots on the
+breast and flanks is much the color of the female bobwhite.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is like that of the quail generally, simply
+a depression in the ground, carefully hidden away in some thick matted
+grass or bunch of brush, and generally higher up the hill-sides than
+they are found at other times. Eggs, white, and of a china appearance,
+and from ten to fifteen in number.
+
+=Measurements=--While these birds are fully one-half larger than the
+blue quail, the very short tail makes their total length not over 8 to
+9 inches; wing, 5 inches, and bill, 5/8.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BOBWHITE (Colinus virginianus)]
+
+
+THE BOBWHITE
+
+(Colinus virginianus)
+
+I have said that the voice of the bobwhite is heard in the land. This
+is true, for the clear notes of his little throat awaken the morning
+echoes from eastern Oregon to the islands of Puget Sound. This great
+little game bird, whose praise has been recounted in volumes of prose
+and sung in the rhythmic measures of countless lines of verse, is not
+a native of the coast, but he knew a good thing when he saw it. When
+he was turned loose in the Pacific Northwest he cast his bright little
+eyes about him and remarked to himself:
+
+ "This looks good to me. Bobwhite, get busy at once in raising big
+ families and settle up your new domain."
+
+And he has done it, for now the sportsmen of the Pacific Northwest
+have better bobwhite shooting than is to be found in any part of the
+eastern states.
+
+The bobwhite roosts on the ground and always remains in single broods.
+When startled they huddle together and flush in a bunch. They are good
+hiders and lie well to the dog. They are seldom found far from water
+and rarely in heavy brush. They are fond of stubble or corn fields and
+the grassy nooks along the fences. Many efforts have been made to
+acclimatize this species farther south in California but they have all
+proved failures on account of the dryer climate and the lack of
+insects during the rearing season of their young. They must have a
+damp climate where the vegetation remains green, thus furnishing an
+abundance of insects during the early summer on which to feed their
+young. For until a bobwhite is nearly grown it lives almost entirely
+upon insects.
+
+=Color=--Male--General color of the upper parts, light buff, marked
+with triangular blotches of brown; head and back of the neck, dark
+chestnut; forehead, gray; light stripe from above the eye passing down
+the side of the neck; throat, white or very light buff, faintly
+bordered with dark brown or black; breast, light buff with the
+feathers tipped with brown; flanks chestnut mixed with black and
+white.
+
+Female--Generally lighter, and without the white throat and light
+breast.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are rude depressions on the ground beneath
+a fence rail or fallen limb, or in a bunch of thick grass or brush.
+The eggs number anywhere from fifteen to twenty and of a pure white
+color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length about nine inches; wing, 4-1/2 inches;
+bill, 5/8.
+
+
+THE MASKED BOBWHITE
+
+(Colinus ridgewayi)
+
+A smaller species of the bobwhite, known as the masked bobwhite, were
+reasonably plentiful along the border of southern Arizona and south
+through the state of Sonora, Mexico. Like the typical bobwhite they
+were strictly a field and grass bird. But through the heavy pasturing
+of that section, together with a series of dry seasons denuding the
+whole country of such cover as would be necessary for their protection
+from hawks and vermin, they have become nearly if not quite extinct.
+They differed from the eastern bobwhite in that the male had a black
+throat instead of a white one and a bright cinnamon breast. The
+female differed also in having a light buff throat, and generally of a
+lighter color.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, GALLINAE
+
+ Family, TETRAONIDAE
+
+ Subfamily, PERDICINAE
+
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range
+ ---------- ------------------ ----------------- ---------------------
+ {Coast Range of
+ {pictus Mountain quail {California from
+ { {Monterey Bay north
+ { {into Western Oregon.
+ {
+ { {Both sides of the
+ Oreortyx {pictus plumiferus Mountain quail {Sierra Nevadas from
+ { {Central Oregon south.
+ { {Coast range of
+ { {California from
+ { {Monterey Bay south.
+ {
+ { {Peninsula of Lower
+ { {California,
+ {pictus confinis {Lower California {inter-grading in the
+ {mountain quail {northern part with the
+ {pictus plumiferus.
+
+ {Coast Range valleys
+ {californicus Valley quail {of California from
+ { {San Francisco Bay
+ { {north into Oregon.
+ {
+ { {Both sides of the
+ { {Sierra Nevadas from
+ Lophortyx {californicus Valley quail {Central Oregon south.
+ {vallicola {Coast range valleys
+ { {south from San
+ { {Francisco Bay into
+ { {Lower California.
+ {
+ { {Gambel quail {Southern Nevada,
+ {gambeli { {Southeastern
+ { {California, Western
+ {Arizona quail {Arizona and Northern
+ {Mexico.
+
+ {squamata Scaled quail {Southern Arizona
+ { {and Northern Mexico.
+ Callipepla {
+ {elegans Elegant quail {Southern Sonora,
+ {Mexico.
+
+ {Montezuma quail {Southwestern Arizona
+ Cyrtonyx {montezuma { {and south into
+ {Messena quail {Mexico.
+
+ {ridgewayi Masked Bobwhite {Northwestern Sonora,
+ { {Mexico.
+ {
+ Colinus { {Introduced and
+ { {acclimated in
+ {virginianus Bobwhite {Washington and Oregon
+ {and the islands
+ {of Puget Sound.
+
+
+
+
+THE WILD TURKEY
+
+
+If there is any member of the feathered tribe entitled
+to the designation of royal game bird, it is the wild turkey. This
+magnificent bird, whose size and cunning challenges at once the
+admiration and the skill of the sportsman, is a native of North and
+Central America, and found in its wild state in no other part of the
+globe. The ocellated turkey, the Central American species, is even
+more gaudy in plumage than the peacock, but as it is not found within
+the territorial scope of these articles, I shall leave its resplendent
+colors to scintillate in its own tropic sun, undescribed.
+
+Of the North American turkeys the scientist recognizes four varieties.
+The =Meleagris sylvestris= of the eastern states, except Florida, the
+=Meleagris sylvestris osceola= of Florida, the =Meleagris sylvestris
+elliotti= of the Rio Grande district of southern Texas and
+northeastern Mexico, and the =Meleagris gallopavo= of Arizona, New
+Mexico, part of Colorado, and west and south through the larger
+portion of old Mexico. It is of this last species that I shall write.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WILD TURKEY (Meleagris gallopavo)]
+
+
+THE MEXICAN WILD TURKEY
+
+(Meleagris gallopavo)
+
+Outside of the progenitors of our common barnyard fowl, there is no
+wild bird that mankind has domesticated whose distribution in its
+domestic state has become so wide as that of the wild turkey, and none
+have been so highly prized as an article of food. It is from the
+Mexican wild turkey, =Meleagris gallopavo=, that all of our domestic
+turkeys have descended. First captured in Mexico by the early settlers
+of that country, they were taken to the West Indies and there
+domesticated as early as 1527, for Oviedo, in his "Natural History of
+the Indias," speaks of the wild turkey having been taken from Mexico
+to the islands and there being bred in a domestic state. From the West
+Indies they were taken to Spain, France and England, and again brought
+back to America as domestic fowls. In 1541 they must have been scarce
+yet in England, for in an edict promulgated by Cranmer in that year,
+the "turkey cocke" was named as one of "the greater fowles," and which
+"an ecclesiastic was to have but one in a dishe." By 1573, however,
+they must have become quite plentiful, for in that year Tusser
+mentions them as the most approved "Christmas husbandlie fare."
+
+Inasmuch as there were no settlements of either English, French or
+Spanish in America north of Mexico until 1584, or in that section of
+the country inhabited by the eastern species of wild turkey until
+sixty years after the turkey is known to have been introduced into
+England, the common belief that the eastern species (=Meleagris
+sylvestris=) was the foundation of the domestic turkey is clearly an
+error; but the ornithologist does not find it necessary to consult
+history to determine the origin of the domestic turkey. That
+distinguishing feature of the Mexican wild turkey (=Meleagris
+gallopavo=), the broad, light sub-terminal of the rump feathers, is so
+strong that even after three and a half centuries of domestication,
+changes in color through selection in breeding, and possibly crossing
+to some extent with the eastern and Florida species, those markings,
+peculiar to it alone, are unmistakably present even in the
+lightest-colored varieties.
+
+As a game bird the turkey has but few equals. Like most of game birds
+they are comparatively tame and unsuspicious until after they have
+been hunted, and learned that of all animals man is their greatest foe
+and most to be dreaded, for whenever he is within sight he is within
+the range of his instruments of destruction. I have seen the Mexican
+wild turkey constantly running or flushing in front of us from morning
+till night as we traveled through their country for days. They showed
+but little fear, for while we killed all we could eat, we were
+constantly traveling, so that those that had been introduced to the
+white man's methods of destroying were left behind us, and those in
+front of us had yet the lesson to learn; but when the wild turkey has
+been hunted a little it becomes about as wary, cunning and resourceful
+as any bird that flies.
+
+The Mexican wild turkey is the largest of the race, and has been, and is
+yet, the most plentiful. They are strictly mountain dwellers, not often
+found in altitudes of less than twenty-five hundred to three thousand
+feet, and more frequently from four to six thousand, and even up to
+eight thousand feet or more. They are strictly timber dwellers, usually,
+if not always, living in the pine forests, for I can not call to mind a
+single instance where I have found them except where pines of some
+variety were the principal trees. In size, individuals vary a good deal.
+So, also, will the general average be found to vary as much as ten
+pounds in different localities. Generally the higher their habitat the
+larger the birds, some of the old gobblers reaching forty pounds if not
+more. I remember killing one in the Sierra Madres of northern Mexico
+that I carried about three miles into camp over a very rough country. By
+the time I got him there I was willing to bet my last "silver 'dobe"
+that he weighed a ton. I have also killed some very large ones in the
+San Francisco mountains of Arizona.
+
+The wild turkey, like the mountain quail, has an up and down mountain
+migration. In the early spring the hens begin to work up the mountains
+and seek the densest jungles, and of course the gobblers follow them.
+The gobblers are polygamous, and have but little respect for their
+families. They will not only destroy the nests, but even the young
+birds. For this reason the hens are very secretive in nesting, taking
+as much care in hiding them away from the gobblers as from their other
+enemies. As soon as the hens begin setting the gobblers gather in
+flocks and remain by themselves until joined in the early fall by the
+hens and their half-grown broods. After this the flocks soon begin
+their migration to the lower hills and mountain openings, and
+congregate into immense roosts. Places were once to be seen where they
+had filled the trees for acres in such numbers as to break the limbs
+in many instances. In those times and localities they were too tame
+and too plentiful to afford much amusement to the man who hunted them
+for sport, but with the exception of some places in Mexico that day
+has passed, and the sportsman who hunts these grand game birds now
+will find a quarry worthy of his skill and affording him sufficient
+exertion to whet his appetite for the delicious feast they furnish
+him.
+
+Both the habits and the habitat of the wild turkey make the sport of
+hunting them especially enjoyable. As soon as the gobblers are
+deserted by the hens they become more wary, and the crack of a twig or
+the sight of a man, be he ever so far away, and they at once seek
+cover. Then the keen eye and the noiseless tread of the still hunter
+is called upon for his best and most careful efforts, for the eyes of
+these gobblers are quick to catch the slightest move and their ears
+acute to the faintest sound. The curiosity of a deer often makes him
+hesitate long enough for the opportunity of a shot, but the gobbler,
+after the hens have left him, is no longer lured by curiosity. His
+business is to keep out of sight, and he can do it, after he has once
+learned the destructiveness of man, just a little more successfully
+than any other bird or animal that I have ever hunted.
+
+There are no wild turkeys west of the Colorado river, nor on the
+peninsula of Lower California; but there can be no reason to doubt
+that, had the mountains of Arizona connected with the pines of the
+Coast range in San Bernardino county or with the Sierras of Inyo or
+Kern, the mountains of California would have been as well supplied
+with turkey as are its valleys with quail.
+
+=Color=--The color of the wild turkey varies very much except in those
+that are found in the higher mountains and far away from civilization.
+Domestication of over three hundred and fifty years has not yet robbed
+the turkey of its love for the wild and they are often seen long
+distances away from the farms feeding contentedly. In countries where
+the wild turkey still existed these tame varieties of various colors
+have mixed with them, often to such an extent as to change the color
+very materially. I have seen flocks in Mexico ranging close to ranch
+houses with turkeys among them so light-colored that they were no
+doubt tame birds that had wandered away with their wild progenitors.
+
+The wild turkey of Mexico, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado is a dark
+bronze bird with a light-colored rump, caused by the upper tail
+coverts being tipped with a broad subterminal band of white, narrowly
+tipped with black. The tail feathers are dark brown, spotted with
+black and tipped with white.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest of the wild turkey is generally in a
+depression in the ground, high up on the mountains, and carefully
+hidden away in some dense thicket. I cannot call to mind ever seeing
+but two nests. One of these had but seven eggs while the other had
+seventeen. The markings are the same as those of the tame turkey.
+
+=Measurements=--The total length varies from three to four and a half
+feet; wing 18 to 24 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: MONGOLIAN PHEASANT (Phasianus torquatus)]
+
+
+THE MONGOLIAN PHEASANT
+
+(Phasianus torquatus)
+
+While the wild turkey is the only representative of the =Phasianidae=
+found native to the American continent, the Mongolian pheasant has
+been so successfully acclimatized in Oregon and Washington that it
+must now be recognized as an established resident species.
+
+After it became an established fact that these pheasants were proving
+a success in Oregon, there became a demand for their introduction into
+California, and thousands of dollars were spent for a number of years
+in an unsuccessful effort to acclimatize them. The pheasant, like the
+grouse, is a cold country bird, and the mild and dry climate of
+California does not appeal to their peculiar tastes or the
+requirements of their physical being. Oregon, however, possesses the
+climatic, floral and entomic conditions for which nature has fitted
+them. Green vegetation lasts during the whole season in which they
+rear their young, thus furnishing them with that abundance of insects
+necessary to the health and nourishment of the young chicks. They are
+endowed with certain physical attributes for which the cold of winter
+is necessary to preserve a continued healthful condition, and this,
+too, they find in Oregon. In fact this constitutional demand for the
+cold of winter has been by nature so strongly implanted within them
+that the rearing of thirty generations in the comparatively mild
+climate of Oregon has not effaced it, and obeying this primal instinct
+they have migrated through Washington and into the better-loved and
+colder winters of British Columbia.
+
+Therefore, while California undoubtedly may have an abundance of wild
+turkeys, quail in unlimited numbers and of two or three more species
+than we have at present, the timber and the plain tinamus of South
+America, and possibly the sand grouse of southern Europe, she will
+never have pheasants unless they be of the extreme southern varieties,
+and never have more than a limited supply of grouse.
+
+North of the mountains of southern Oregon and through Washington into
+British Columbia pheasants are plentiful and furnish the principal
+sport of the lovers of upland shooting of that section of the Pacific
+Coast. The Mongolian pheasant as a game bird has his merits and
+demerits. As a large, beautiful plumaged bird to grace the game bag
+the pheasant stands without a rival. As a table bird the pheasant is
+only surpassed in delicacy of flavor by the wild turkey. As an
+aggravating runner from the dog the pheasant is in a class by itself,
+and as an evader of all pursuit when wounded, "the Chinaman," as they
+are generally called in Oregon, can give odds to the gambel quail.
+Though the pheasant is a large bird and able to carry off a good deal
+of shot, it starts so slow to one accustomed to the rapid flight of
+the California quail that a reasonably fair shot will find no
+difficulty in getting the limit with a sixteen gauge.
+
+They are slow starters, caused by their habit of rising at an angle of
+forty-five to fifty degrees until they reach a height of about ten
+feet before their rapid flight begins, but when once on the wing they
+are quite swift flyers.
+
+While I have said that the pheasants are aggravating runners, this is
+principally so in the latter part of the season. In the earlier parts
+they are commonly found in the stubble fields, potato and other
+vegetable patches, and usually in single broods. At such times I have
+found them to lie quite well to the dog, not flushing until closely
+approached, and running but little except when winged. They are then
+easy shooting, but the fine size of the bird and the beautiful plumage
+of the cocks give a zest to the sport and a pleasant distinctiveness
+which every sportsman will be pleased to add to the list of upland
+shooting he has engaged in.
+
+To those who wish to spend a season on these handsome birds, Oregon,
+especially, offers an attraction which goes far beyond its good supply
+of pheasants. During the open pheasant season the climate of Oregon is
+as near perfect as one can ask. That season of the eastern states that
+has been idealized in verse, and is known as Indian summer, finds its
+superlative in the early fall of Oregon. The sun shines brightly, but
+with its rays softened by its sub-equinoctial position; the air is
+mild, clear and invigorating, and the golden hues of the stubble
+field, the yet bright green of the grassy pastures, the rich tints of
+the dying autumn leaves, all framed in the blue-green fringe of the
+near-by pines and firs, produce a picture strikingly beautiful and
+always enjoyed. It is in this delightful season with such a picture on
+every side, heightened by an occasional glimpse of some towering
+mountain peak with its crown of eternal snows, that the sportsman of
+Oregon lays aside the cares of life and lives in an elysium during his
+pheasant-shooting days. The setting of the stage is as much to the
+play as the acting. So with our days after game. The invigorating air
+we breathe, the beauty of the landscape, the stateliness of the
+forest, the rugged grandeur of the mountains, the soul-inspiring
+picture of our dogs on point and back, lends more to the real
+enjoyment of the day than does the size of the bag we carry home.
+
+=Color=--Male--The male of the Mongolian pheasant can not be
+confounded with any other game bird in America. Its very long tail
+feathers--from fifteen to twenty inches--will always prove a
+distinguishing mark. Its rich metallic colors of black, cinnamon,
+chestnut and ocher give it a combination of hues surpassing that of
+any other of our game birds.
+
+Female--Nor should the female ever be mistaken for any other bird. It
+partakes much of the general colors of the male, but much subdued and
+more of a general ochreous hue, the plumage being buff mottled with
+brown. The tail, however, is not more than one-fourth the length of
+that of the male.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is generally a depression on the ground, but
+often in the hollow of some log. The eggs number from 12 to 18 and are
+of a dark ochre in color.
+
+=Measurements=--The measurements of a Mongolian pheasant are
+practically useless on account of the larger portion of it being the
+tail, which greatly varies in length.
+
+
+
+
+THE PIGEONS AND DOVES
+
+
+The family =Columbidae= is represented on the Pacific Coast by three
+genera which are considered, to more or less extent, legitimate game,
+though they can not be termed game birds in the generally accepted use
+of the term. Still as they are hunted to a very considerable extent by
+the sportsmen of the Coast, they rightfully belong in a work of this
+kind. I shall, therefore, give them a place, and briefly treat each
+species that is pursued as game within the territory under
+consideration.
+
+
+ [Illustration:
+ MOURNING DOVE BANDED PIGEON WHITE-WINGED DOVE
+ (Zenaidura macroura) (Columba faciata) (Melopelia leucoptera)]
+
+
+THE WILD PIGEON
+
+(Columba faciata)
+
+The wild, or banded pigeon, is a mountain dweller, found principally
+in the southern half of the territory covered by this work. They visit
+the valleys in the fall and winter months to feed on the oak mast, and
+at such times they are seen in large flocks in the Sacramento, San
+Joaquin and coast valleys of California. They are found in good
+numbers in parts of Arizona, and are common along both sides of the
+Sierra Madres of Mexico. When visiting the valleys they afford good
+sport, as they are swift flyers and capable of carrying off a good
+deal of shot. They have no migrations like the passenger pigeon once
+so plentiful in the eastern states, nor do they congregate in such
+immense flocks.
+
+=Color=--About the same as the darker colored tame pigeon; the tail is
+a trifle longer than the tame bird and a little lighter than the rest
+of the plumage with a dark band across the middle of it; a small patch
+of white feathers at the back of the head. Both sexes are alike.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is built in the trees of small twigs and
+grass. Two eggs are layed at a time, and a pair of young birds are
+produced about every six weeks from April to August.
+
+=Measurements=--A trifle more than the tame pigeon.
+
+
+THE MOURNING DOVE
+
+(Zenaidura macroura)
+
+The mourning dove is a cosmopolitan species found in greater or less
+numbers in all sections. They have a slight migratory movement from
+the higher to the lower altitudes, but they cannot be called a
+migratory bird. A large number of these birds begin their nesting
+season in the mountains at altitudes of from 2000 to 4000 feet,
+raising one brood at that height, then moving down and nesting again,
+and moving again until they reach the lower valleys, where they remain
+all winter, congregating in certain places in flocks of hundreds.
+Many, however, remain in the valleys all the year and nest around the
+fields and along the streams.
+
+The mourning dove is so well known in every country that a description
+of it is unnecessary.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is generally built in the small trees and
+lined with any soft article that they can find. The eggs number two
+and a pair of the young birds are hatched about every six weeks from
+May to September.
+
+
+THE WHITE-WINGED DOVE
+
+(Melopelia leucoptera)
+
+The white-winged dove is nearly one-half larger than the common
+mourning dove. They range from Mexico through southern Arizona to the
+Colorado desert in southeastern California. In some parts of Arizona
+and in Mexico they are found in large numbers, and afford good
+shooting. Their habits are the same as the common dove, both as to
+food and nesting, though in parts of Mexico it nests in the pitahaya
+plants--a species of cactus--of whose fruit it is very fond.
+
+This species can easily be distinguished from any other member of the
+dove family by the broad patch of white on the wings.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, GALLINAE
+
+ Family, TETRAONIDAE
+
+ Subfamily, TETRAONINAE. (Grouse)
+
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range
+ -------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ {umbellus sabini Oregon ruffed {Western Oregon and Washington
+ { grouse {and Northwestern California.
+ {
+ Bonasa { {Eastern sides of Cascade
+ {umbellus togata Canada ruffed {Mountains in Oregon and
+ { grouse {Washington, thence East.
+
+ {Northeastern California,
+ Centrocercus urophasianus Sage hen {Nevada and the sage lands
+ {of Oregon and Washington.
+
+ {Western slope of the
+ {franklini Spruce grouse {Cascade Mountains.
+ {
+ { {Northeastern Arizona and
+ Dendragapus {obscurus Dusky grouse {Eastern Nevada.
+ {
+ { {Coast Range and Sierras from
+ {obscurus Sooty grouse {Southern California to
+ { fuliginosus {British Columbia.
+
+ {Eastern Oregon and Washington
+ Pediocaetes phasianellus Sharp-tail {and a few in Northeastern
+ columbianus grouse {California.
+
+
+
+
+THE GROUSE
+
+
+Within the territorial scope of this work there are seven species of
+the grouse family, though only four of these are in any way common. As
+the wild turkey is confined to the southern extremity of the Pacific
+Coast hunting grounds, so are the grouse principally found in the
+northern sections. I have met with a few dusky grouse (=Dendragapus
+obscurus=) in the mountains of Arizona, but they are by no means
+plentiful. There were a few and possibly is yet an occasional sooty
+grouse (=Dendragapus obscurus fuliginosus=) in the mountains of
+southern California, but grouse in sufficient numbers to furnish any
+kind of sport are not found much south of Yosemite valley in the
+Sierras, or south of Humboldt county in the Coast range. An occasional
+pair or small flock, however, may be met with considerable south of
+the points named.
+
+The grouse is a northern bird, extending into far colder regions than
+any other subfamily of the gallinaceous group. The ptarmigan, of
+course, are grouse.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SOOTY GROUSE (Dendragapus obscurus fuliginosus)]
+
+
+THE SOOTY GROUSE
+
+(Dendragapus obscurus fuliginosus)
+
+The sooty grouse, commonly called blue grouse by the sportsmen of
+California, are reasonably plentiful in the Sierras from the Yosemite
+north into Oregon, where they are quite plentiful, and from there
+through Washington into Alaska. It is a mountain dweller, being found
+at altitudes fully 9000 feet above the sea. In the winter it descends
+to lower latitudes, but seldom below 3000 feet. It is naturally a
+confiding bird where it has not been hunted much, and for this reason
+has been given the name, "fool hen," in many localities. But like
+most of the feathered tribe, it soon learns the destructiveness of
+man, and after gaining this knowledge it is quite able to take care of
+itself. When flushed it flies with a cackling sound, generally taking
+refuge in the tall pines, where it is an expert hider. In the nesting
+season it produces a drumming sound and struts like a turkey. This
+drumming is produced by inflating an air sack on each side of the
+neck. Later in the season these sacks dry up and nearly disappear.
+It's only migrations are ascending and descending the mountains with
+the seasons.
+
+According to a published statement of the Section of Biological Survey
+of the United States Department of Agriculture, the food of the sooty
+grouse consists of buds, seeds, leaves and insects, of which 68 per cent
+is leaves, buds and the tender ends of young twigs; 6.73 per cent
+insects and the balance seeds, berries and the like. The flesh is
+generally of a fine flavor, though at times it will be found to be
+tainted a little strongly with the flavor of the pine.
+
+=Color=--Male--Back of head, back of neck and all upper parts, a sooty
+brown; light streak over the eye and a light throat; breast, a dead or
+sooty black; the rest of the under parts a slaty gray; tail tipped
+with gray.
+
+Female--Generally lighter in color but otherwise resembling the male.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually nothing more than a depression in
+the ground among dried leaves or grass, well concealed from view. The
+eggs, which average about a dozen, are of a cream color, spotted with
+brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, from 18 to 22 inches; wing, 9 to 9-1/2. The
+weight will vary from 2-1/2 to 4 pounds.
+
+
+ [Illustration: OREGON RUFFED GROUSE (Bonasa umbellus sabini)]
+
+
+THE OREGON RUFFED GROUSE
+
+(Bonasa umbellus sabini)
+
+The Oregon ruffed grouse is the handsomest species of the ruffed
+grouse genus, and is truly a beautiful bird with its deep, rich
+browns, orange and black. The eastern species of this genus is wrongly
+known in the north Atlantic states by the name of partridge, and as
+wrongly called pheasant in Virginia and some other of the southern
+states. The Pacific Coast species ranges from northern California
+along the Coast range through Oregon, Washington and far into British
+Columbia. It is a wary bird, full of cunning and gamy qualities. The
+male of this genus is, I believe, the only member of the grouse family
+that drums all the year; all others confining their drumming to the
+nesting season. This drumming is made with the wings and not by the
+inflation of an air sack as with other species. The sound, also, is
+much different, having more of a rolling reverberation. In the spring
+they will take their position on some rock or dead log and strut back
+and forth with their heads thrown back and their tails spread out to
+show the beautiful hues of the feathers and drum for hours to attract
+the hens or challenge the other males to an almost life and death
+combat, in which they fight in the same manner as the game cock. They
+live among the pines, usually near some little opening where they are
+fond of feeding. When startled they take at once to the timber and are
+quickly lost to view. For this reason dogs are almost useless in
+hunting them. They are never found in numbers greater than a single
+brood, even though the brood may be decimated by the gun of the
+sportsman or the cunning of the vermin to no more than two or three.
+
+The flesh of the ruffed grouse is white and generally tender and of
+fine flavor, although in the late fall or winter when its food
+consists almost wholly of fir buds it tastes quite strong of
+turpentine. Its food generally is about the same as the sooty grouse
+and in about the same percentages.
+
+=Color=--Head, light chestnut, the feathers on the top being long and
+capable of erection when excited; a tuft of long, rich brown feathers
+will be found on each side of the neck; back, reddish chestnut mottled
+with black; rump and tail-coverts, more of a cinnamon color blotched
+with dark brown; flanks, lighter and barred with black; tail, rusty
+brown barred with deep brown and tipped with two bands of gray,
+separated by a streak of black; under tail-coverts, orange, barred
+with black and tipped with white; wing feathers, brown with a central
+stripe of light yellow.
+
+The female is marked the same but somewhat lighter in coloring.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest, like that of all the gallinaceous birds, is
+made on the ground and hidden away in some thick cluster of brush or
+beneath some log. The eggs are of a buff color spotted with dark
+brown, and number from ten to fifteen.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length from 16 to 19 inches; wing about 7 or 8
+inches. Weight about 2 pounds.
+
+
+THE CANADIAN RUFFED GROUSE
+
+(Bonasa umbellus togata)
+
+The Canadian ruffed grouse ranges through the eastern side of the
+Cascade mountains of Oregon and Washington, but does not pass over to
+the Pacific side. It resembles the Oregon ruffed grouse very closely
+except that it is much lighter in color, and the female either lacks
+the tufts of feathers on the neck entirely, or where present, they are
+very small. Like the Oregon species it is a dweller in the heavy
+timber, and follow the same habits in most all respects. It is of a
+more confiding nature, however, often sitting unconcerned upon a tree
+while several of its companions are being shot, making no effort to
+get away or save itself from the same fate.
+
+=Color=--The color of this species is more of a grayish brown than the
+Oregon species, and lacking that rich chestnut that adds so much to
+the beauty of the latter. The brown markings, however, are possibly a
+little more conspicuous. The upper tail feathers are more of a blue,
+mottled and barred with a blackish brown. A large tuft of feathers on
+each side of the neck of a smoky brown, edged with metallic green.
+Unlike the Oregon species these feathers are entirely absent or very
+small on the female.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest and eggs are the same as the Oregon grouse.
+
+=Measurements=--In size the two species do not vary to any
+considerable extent.
+
+
+THE SPRUCE GROUSE
+
+(Dendragapus franklini)
+
+The spruce or Franklin grouse of Oregon and Washington is a species of
+the Canadian spruce grouse, and ranges diagonally through the
+mountains of eastern Oregon and Washington, and thence to the coast of
+British Columbia. It confines its habitat to the higher mountains,
+being seldom found below an elevation of four to five thousand feet.
+This is another of the grouse family that has been given the name of
+"fool hen," on account of its naturally tame nature. When sitting on
+the limb of a tree, but a few feet above the ground, it considers
+itself safe from all harm and makes little effort to escape, and may
+often be killed with a stick. There is little sport in shooting this
+variety. The food of this species, like all other mountain dwelling
+grouse, is buds, tender shoots and seeds, berries and insects when
+obtainable.
+
+=Color=--Male--Upper parts gray, the central back and the wings having
+a brownish hue; the tail-coverts, which are tipped with broad
+splashes of white is a distinguishing feature of this species;
+feathers, on the flanks tipped broadly with white, throat, black,
+imperfectly edged with white; tail, nearly square at the end and of a
+brownish color.
+
+Female--Considerably more of an ochreous cast. It has the same
+characteristic broad white tips on the feathers of the flanks; tail,
+dirty ochre, mottled with black and narrowly tipped with white.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is a depression in the ground in some
+secluded place and lined with leaves or grass. The eggs, averaging
+about a dozen, are of a reddish buff mottled with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length about 15 inches; wing about 7 inches.
+Weight from one and a half to two pounds.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SAGE COCK (Centrocercus europhasianus)]
+
+
+THE SAGE HEN
+
+(Centrocercus urophasianus)
+
+The sage grouse, or sage hen is the largest of the grouse of America,
+some of the males weighing as much as seven pounds. Its range, so far
+as the geographical scope of this work is concerned, is northeastern
+California, Nevada, and eastern Oregon and Washington, but it extends
+much farther east. It is only found in the sage brush districts of the
+high altitudes. They usually remain in single broods, though they are
+sometimes found in much larger flocks. They often travel for
+considerable distances, "following the leader" in single file. They
+strut in the nesting season, but in a peculiar way, pushing their
+breasts on the ground until the feathers are worn off and even the
+skin abraded.
+
+A peculiarity of the sage grouse is that it has no gizzard, but
+instead it has a stomach more like that of an animal. The young birds
+lie quite well to a dog and furnish very good sport, and until they
+are about half grown the flesh is quite good, but the older birds are
+very unsavory and in fact almost unpalatable. This is caused by their
+feeding almost entirely upon the leaves of the sage.
+
+=Color=--Male--Upper parts, gray, barred with brown; tail, very long,
+the longer feathers being quite narrow and stiff and barred also with
+brown; a dark line over the eye and a light one from the eye down the
+side of the neck; throat and cheeks, nearly white, mottled with black;
+a few long hairy like feathers grow from the side of the neck of the
+male birds.
+
+Female--The female is colored and marked like the male but
+considerably darker, is much smaller, with shorter tail and without
+the hairy feathers on the side of the neck.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is nothing more than a hollow in the midst
+of some bunch of brush, possibly lined with a few leaves. The eggs are
+from twelve to eighteen in number and of a greenish shade, mottled
+with bright brown, but these spots are easily rubbed off.
+
+=Measurements=--Male--Total length from 24 to 28 inches; wing,
+12 to 14. Weight, from four to seven pounds.
+
+Female--Total length, from 20 to 22 inches; wing, 10 to 12. Weight,
+from three to five pounds.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SHARP-TAIL GROUSE
+ (Pediocaetes phasianellus columbianus)]
+
+
+COLUMBIAN SHARP-TAILED GROUSE
+
+(Pediocaetes phasianellus columbianus)
+
+The Columbian sharp-tailed grouse is the "prairie chicken" of eastern
+Washington. It is far different from the pinated grouse
+(=Tympanuchus=) of the middle states, commonly called prairie chicken.
+Its habitat is much the same, however, being the open plains and
+untimbered foothills east of the Cascade mountains in Washington and
+through eastern Oregon into northern Nevada, and the extreme
+northeastern corner of California. The sharp-tail grouse has the same
+habit of strutting in large groups like the prairie chicken at the
+beginning of the nesting season. They do not drum, however, like the
+eastern bird, but make a noise more like an attempt to crow. They also
+take refuge in the timber for protection from the storms of winter.
+
+During the hunting season they lie well to a dog and afford fine
+shooting. The food of the sharp-tailed grouse consists of about ten
+per cent insects, the balance being made up of seeds, grains and
+berries, with a good percentage of "brouse" in the winter.
+
+=Color=--Male--Side of head and throat, pale buff with mottlings of
+brown on the cheeks; back and wings, gray, mottled with black;
+breast, light buff. Under parts, white with lines of dark brown;
+central tail feathers long and pointed; no long feathers on the neck.
+
+Female--Resembles the male with the exception that the tail feathers
+are not so long.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is a rude affair on the ground, lined with a
+little dead grass and generally contains from ten to fifteen eggs of a
+greenish buff speckled with fine dots of brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length from 14 to 16 inches, with the wing about
+eight; the central tail feathers are about five inches in length. The
+average bird will weigh about two pounds.
+
+
+
+
+ Order ANSERES
+
+ Family, ANATIDAE
+
+
+ Range. (All
+ Genus Species Common Names breed far north.)
+ ------------ ------------------ ------------------- -------------------
+
+ Subfamily, ANSERENAE
+
+ {hyperborea {White goose {From Southern
+ Chen { {(large) {California north.
+ {
+ {rossi {Ross' goose {From Mexico
+ {Small white goose {north.
+
+ Anser albifrons gambeli {White-fronted {From Mexico
+ {goose {north.
+ {Gray goose {
+
+ {Fulvous tree duck {From Central
+ Dendrocygna fulva {Mexican tree duck {California south
+ {Cavalier {through Mexico.
+ {Breeds from Central
+ {California to
+ {Central Mexico.
+
+ {canadensis {Canada goose {From central
+ { {Honker {Mexico north.
+ {
+ {canadensis Hutchins' goose From Southern
+ {hutchinsii California north.
+ {
+ {canadensis White-cheeked {Inland plains from
+ Branta {occidentalis goose {Central California
+ { {north.
+ {
+ {canadensis {Black brant {From Southern
+ {minima {Cackling goose {California north.
+ {
+ {nigricans Black sea brant {On certain bays
+ {from Magdalena,
+ {Lower California
+ {north.
+
+ Philacte canagica Emperor goose {A rare visitor
+ {south of Humboldt
+ {Bay, California
+
+ Subfamily, CYGNINAE
+
+ {columbianus Whistling swan {From Oregon north.
+ Olor { {Rarely as far
+ { {south as Central
+ { {California.
+ {
+ {buccinator Trumpeter swan From Southern
+ { California north.
+
+
+
+
+THE WATERFOWL
+
+
+The great variety of the waterfowl of the Pacific Coast, the wonderful
+numbers in which they are found and the excellent shooting they
+afford, forms a subject, which, to do it justice, would require the
+space of an ordinary volume.
+
+With the exception of the Gulf tier of the Southern states, waterfowl
+on the Atlantic Coast are but birds of passage, tarrying for a time on
+their way to milder winter quarters; tourists loitering for a day or
+two at attractive by-stations as they wing their way south in the fall
+and again on their return north in the spring. They are leaving the
+isolation of the far north or the mountain lakes and marshes where
+they spent the summer rearing their young and they are seeking more
+favorable feeding grounds in the milder climate of the South, where
+animal and vegetable life is not in the state of hibernation which
+prevents it from furnishing them with an abundance of food during
+their southern sojourn.
+
+Over the larger portion of our hunting grounds what is the beginning
+of the calendar year is in fact the beginning of our spring. When the
+frost king lays his hand upon all vegetable and insect life in the
+East, spreading his white shroud over field and pasture and breaking
+with his icy sleet from the vine and the brush their clinging leaves;
+when from the trees have fallen the last vestige of their autumnal
+crowns of gold and crimson; when the last flower has shed its petals;
+when the last hum of insect is heard and the last song of bird has
+died away on the southern horizon--'tis then the early rains of the
+Coast start the new sown grain in the fields, give life again to the
+grasses of the plains, carpet the foothills and the valleys with the
+gold and purple and crimson of innumerable flowers, and our veritable
+spring commences.
+
+With us, therefore, waterfowl are not passing pilgrims, tarrying for a
+few days only as they rest and feed on their way to the open waters
+and green pastures in which they intend to pass those months marked
+winter on the calendar of the year. They are not mere hurrying flocks
+alighting now and again as they wing their way back to their breeding
+grounds in the spring But ours is the Mecca to which they journey;
+ours the feeding grounds on which they assemble from the lakes and
+marshes of the Arctic; from the whole chain of the Aleutian Islands;
+from the inland seas of British Columbia and from the mountain lakes
+of our own Sierras from Washington to Mexico. Here on the bays,
+estuaries and marshes of the coast and the lakes and ponds of the
+valleys, throughout the whole length of these hunting grounds,
+countless millions of these birds have found their winter feeding
+grounds for unnumbered ages. No cold, no ice, no snow, no howling
+blizzards to stop them in their search for food or disturb their
+midday rest upon our quiet waters. In warmth they feed upon the tender
+shoots of the young grasses that fringe their watery haunts or bask in
+sunshine on the sandy shores.
+
+It is the popular impression that all ducks breed in the far north and
+migrate from there south. One has only to shoot on the lakes of Mexico
+to learn how erroneous this impression is, for one will meet varieties
+quite common there that rarely if ever reach the southern boundaries
+of the United States.
+
+The masked duck (=Nomonyx dominicus=) is a purely southern species
+reaching Mexico only in its breeding season. The three species of the
+Mexican tree duck, quite common in that country, come but little into
+the United States. One of these, the black-bellied tree duck
+(=Dendrocygna autumnalis=) migrates to some little extent into Texas
+and to less extent into New Mexico and Arizona. The fulvous tree duck
+(=Dendrocygna fulva=) extends its migrations still farther north,
+breeding to considerable extent in Arizona and southern California,
+but rarely seen as far north as the center of the state. The other
+species of the genus (=Dendrocygna elegans=), for which I know no
+English name, is even rare as far south as southern Jalisco. The
+cinnamon teal is a southern duck, breeding in Arizona, Texas and
+southern California but so rarely seen north of San Francisco that a
+gentleman who had killed a straggler near Marysville, when showing it
+to me, said that he couldn't find a man in the town who could tell him
+what it was. Yet the cinnamon teal is very common in Mexico and
+Arizona and quite plentiful in southern California in the spring,
+before the flocks break up and the birds seek their nesting places.
+
+Northern bred ducks and purely northern species visit us in great
+numbers during the winter months, and to these must be added the vast
+number of these birds that breed in the mountains throughout our
+hunting grounds.
+
+The ornithologist divides the ducks into two subfamilies; the
+fresh-water ducks forming the subfamily, =Anatinae=, and the salt-water
+ducks the subfamily, =Fullgilinae=. These two families can easily be
+distinguished by their feet. If a salt-water duck, the hind toe will
+be found to have a small web or flap on the under side, but if the
+bird belongs to the fresh-water group, the toe will be as clean as any
+land bird.
+
+
+ [Illustration: MALLARD (Anas boschas)]
+
+
+THE MALLARD
+
+(Anas boschas)
+
+The mallard is possibly the best known duck in America, it being found
+in greater or less numbers everywhere from the Arctic to Central
+America. It is a resident species throughout the Pacific Coast,
+breeding on the mountain lakes and streams from Mexico to Alaska, and
+even to a considerable extent on the lower marshes of California,
+Oregon and Washington. On the fresh water ponds and overflows they
+congregate in great numbers during the winter months and a bag limit
+of twenty is no uncommon thing. Like all of the fresh-water ducks of
+this Coast, they, too, are often found in considerable numbers on the
+tide lands and salt marshes.
+
+The mallard of the Pacific Coast can hardly be said to be a migratory
+duck, for it breeds from Mexico north. Its migrations consisting more
+of altitudinal movements than of longitudinal. While it breeds on the
+mountain lakes of Mexico, it is rarely seen in the higher altitudes
+during the winter months.
+
+Hybrids between the mallard and the pin-tail and the mallard and the
+widgeon have been occasionally met with on the marshes of the Coast.
+This is most likely caused by the mating of cripples that had not the
+strength to make the flight to their usual breeding grounds.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, dark green with a metallic luster;
+white ring around the neck at the bottom of the green; back, gray;
+breast, chestnut brown; under parts dirty white; tail, black with two
+feathers curled upwards; speculum, (see diagram) purple, bordered with
+black and white.
+
+Female--Head, dark buff; breast, lighter buff with brown mottlings;
+legs, orange colored; speculum same as the male; bill, yellow,
+blotched with brown.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is placed on the ground and lined with
+grass, feathers and down. The eggs number eight to a dozen and are of
+a greenish tinge.
+
+=Measurements=--Male--Total length, from 20 to 25 inches; wing, 10 to
+12 inches; bill, 2-1/2 inches.
+
+Female--Total length, from 18 to 20 inches; wing, 9 to 10 inches;
+bill, 2 to 2-1/4 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: GADWALL (Anas strepera)]
+
+
+THE GADWALL
+
+(Anas strepera)
+
+The gadwall was at one time quite plentiful on the shooting grounds of
+California, south of San Francisco; but, on account of our season
+opening later and closing earlier than in years past, few are killed
+now. The gadwall is really a southern duck, coming into the United
+States to breed. When the California season opened on the first of
+September and closed the first of April, there were plenty of gadwall
+found on its ponds in the early fall and late in the spring. Now, but
+few are killed except in the southern part of the state. Such as are
+killed are generally found on the mountain lakes and ponds of the
+higher valleys. On the waters of Mexico and Lower California, however,
+they are met with in good numbers.
+
+The gadwall, however, migrates as far north as British Columbia for
+breeding purposes as well as breeding on the mountain lakes of all the
+territory through which it ranges.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head, light brown, finely mottled with dark brown and
+black; neck and breast, finely streaked with wavy black and white;
+under parts, grayish white; rump and tail, black; speculum, black and
+white, with the lesser wing-coverts chestnut; feet, orange, and bill
+nearly white.
+
+Female--Closely resembling the male but with very little chestnut on
+the wings.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest which is usually made a little way back
+from the water is lined with dead grass, and contains from ten to
+twelve eggs of a light buff color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 19 inches; wing, 10, and bill,
+1.60.
+
+
+[Illustration: WIDGEON (Anas americana)]
+
+
+THE WIDGEON
+
+(Anas Americana)
+
+The widgeon is one of the most common ducks of the Coast, both north
+and south. As well as being one of the most plentiful of the interior
+lakes and ponds, they are found in great numbers on the salt marshes
+and tide overflows, and even form great dark patches on the ocean as
+they take their midday rest on its bosom a mile or so beyond the surf.
+They breed on the mountain lakes and streams all along the Coast from
+Mexico north.
+
+The widgeon begins its migrations early in the fall and great numbers
+find their way as far south as the Coast marshes and lower lakes of
+Mexico. They feed largely on the plains and frequent the fields in
+search of grain. In migrating or flying from pond to pond they usually
+go in quite large flocks.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head, pinkish white on top, with a greenish streak from
+the eye back to the ociput; below this the head and neck are speckled
+with black and white; back and wing-coverts, gray with fine markings
+of black; breast, a light brick red with a purplish cast; speculum,
+black and green. Axillars, white with dark shafts.
+
+Female--The female resembles the male in all but the green on the head
+and the reddish color of the breast.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is generally built in some tuft of grass or
+thick weeds near some water's edge. The eggs average about a dozen and
+are of very light brownish white.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 18 inches; wing 9-1/2, and bill, 1-1/2.
+
+
+ [Illustration: GREEN-WINGED TEAL (Anas carolinensis)]
+
+
+GREEN-WINGED TEAL
+
+(Anas carolinensis)
+
+The green-winged teal is another variety that is very plentiful on the
+Coast, breeding in great numbers on our mountain lakes and along the
+streams from Mexico to Alaska, and even to considerable extent on the
+lower marshes, especially from central California north. While many of
+these are killed on the salt marshes and tide lands, they are more
+generally frequenters of the inland ponds and overflows. Nesting late
+and maturing early, they are both a late and early duck on our
+shooting grounds, and remain constantly with us during the whole
+winter. Shooting on a pass over which the teal are flying from one
+pond to another furnishes about the finest sport of the duck shooter's
+life. In such cases they come in small flocks, and single birds must
+be selected; being a small mark and very rapid flyers they require a
+good lead and quick work. In fact, a brace of green-winged teal with a
+pressing engagement at the next pond makes about as pretty a target as
+the sportsman often fires at.
+
+The green-winged teal, like the widgeon, feeds a great deal on the
+plains and in the fields.
+
+=Color=--Male--Top of head and neck, brown of a chestnut tinge, the
+feathers forming almost a crest; a broad stripe of green runs back
+from the eye to the neck; back and sides, mottled gray; breast, buff,
+shaded to white on the abdomen and spotted with black; speculum,
+green.
+
+Female--The top of the head of the female is a rusty brown, and with a
+very faint stripe on the sides; upper parts, gray, spotted with black;
+speculum, green.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest of the green-winged teal is generally a
+little more carefully made than most of the ground nesting ducks. The
+eggs average about ten and are of a light brownish buff.
+
+=Measurements=--The green-winged teal is the smallest of the
+fresh-water ducks. Total length, about 14 inches; wing, 7-1/4; bill,
+1-1/4 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CINNAMON TEAL (Anas cyanoptera)]
+
+
+THE CINNAMON TEAL
+
+(Anas cyanoptera)
+
+The cinnamon teal, very commonly called the blue-winged teal by the
+sportsmen of the Coast, is only a late fall and early spring bird on
+our shooting grounds north of Lower California and Mexico. While the
+cinnamon teal has a blue wing there is no resemblance between the
+male cinnamon and the male blue-winged. The females of the two
+species, however, have a marked resemblance in color but a wide
+difference in shape of body. The female cinnamon teal is much darker
+on the throat than the blue-winged female, and generally shows a
+considerable of the cinnamon color of the male. The male of the
+blue-winged teal partakes more of the grayish color of the
+green-winged variety and has a white crescent in front of the eye. The
+northern limit of the cinnamon teal is about the latitude of San
+Francisco so far as their appearance on our shooting grounds is
+concerned. A few, however, go farther north for breeding purposes.
+They are quite common in the southern part of California, where they
+come to breed. They winter in Mexico, Lower California and Arizona in
+great numbers. They nest on the mountain lakes and along the mountain
+streams of California and even as far north as Oregon. In southern
+California they nest along the salt-water marshes, especially those of
+Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties.
+
+=Color=--Male--The male bird cannot well be mistaken for that of any
+other species. The general color being a dark cinnamon, or in fact
+much nearer a chestnut in color; the head being somewhat darker than
+the rest of the bird; the upper wing-coverts being blue, form a large
+patch of blue at the shoulders when the wing is at rest; the speculum,
+like that of all the teal is green.
+
+Female--The female resembles the female of the blue-winged teal, but
+is a little larger with a longer and slimmer body; the chin is dusky
+and the throat is speckled; the breast also has a slight tinge of the
+cinnamon color of the male.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are built generally in long grass patches
+of the low grounds bordering the streams and lakes and even the salt
+marshes. The eggs which average about a dozen are of a peculiar light
+creamy color with a faint bluish tinge.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 16 inches; wing, 7-1/2; bill, 1-3/4.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BLUE-WINGED TEAL (Anas discors)]
+
+
+THE BLUE-WINGED TEAL
+
+(Anas discors)
+
+The blue-winged teal is only a straggler north of Lower California,
+Arizona and Mexico. In Mexico and Lower California I know them to be
+quite common, and reasonably plentiful in some parts of Arizona.
+
+The blue-winged teal is a plumper bird than either of the other
+species, and not near so handsomely marked. It is a rapid flyer and
+affords good shooting in those sections where it is plentiful.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head, a glossy purplish gray, darker on top; between
+the eye and the bill is a white crescent-shaped mark about one-fourth
+wider in its center than the eye; the wing-coverts are blue like those
+of the cinnamon teal; back, dark gray; under parts, gray, spotted with
+black; speculum, rich green; bill, black, and legs and feet, yellow.
+
+Female--The female resembles the female of the cinnamon teal; but
+unlike the cinnamon it has no dark markings under the chin, or any of
+the cinnamon color faintly seen on the cinnamon female. The bill also
+is much shorter, and the legs are of a yellowish tinge.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are much the same as the other members of
+the teal family. The eggs about a dozen in number are pale buff.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 15 inches; wing, about 7, and bill,
+1-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SHOVELLER OR SPOON-BILL
+ (Spatula clypeata)]
+
+
+THE SPOON-BILL OR SHOVELLER
+
+(Spatula clypeata)
+
+The shoveler, or spoonbill, as they are commonly called, is also an
+early duck upon our ponds; they, too, breed throughout the mountains
+of our hunting grounds. When they first arrive on our ponds they are
+very fat and finely flavored, but they soon become poor of flesh and
+lose the flavor brought with them from their mountain homes. And then
+they are generally let pass undisturbed by the discriminating
+sportsman.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, green; breast, white, shading into rusty
+chestnut toward the abdomen; lesser wing-coverts, blue; speculum,
+green, with white border; legs, orange red.
+
+Female--The female is much smaller than the male and lacks all its
+high coloring. The general color is buff, mottled with brown;
+wing-coverts and speculum, same as the male.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest, which is a rude affair, generally contains
+from seven to ten eggs of a light buff color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length of the male, about 20 and the female, 18
+inches; wing, 9 to 9-1/2; bill, about 2-1/2 to 2-3/4 inches, and very
+broad at the end.
+
+
+ [Illustration: PIN-TAIL OR SPRIG (Spatula acuta)]
+
+
+THE PIN-TAIL
+
+(Dafila acuta)
+
+The pin-tail, or sprig is another very common duck of the Coast. Great
+numbers of this species breed on our mountain lakes and, maturing
+early, they are about the first to appear upon our shooting grounds,
+great flocks reaching as far south as San Diego county, the mouth of
+the Colorado river and the lakes and marshes of Lower California,
+Arizona and northern Mexico as early as the middle of August or the
+first of September. They come from the mountains plump and fat, and as
+soon as the shooting season is open prove quite acceptable to the
+epicure.
+
+The pin-tail ranges throughout the territory covered by this work and
+far to the north of it, and the fact that they breed around the
+mountain lakes for the whole distance accounts for their early
+appearance on the shooting grounds of the Coast.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, rich brown, with a white stripe running
+from the ociput down the sides of the neck to the breast; bill, lead
+color, with a black stripe along the top; back, gray; breast, white;
+central tail feathers, very long and pointed; speculum, light smoky
+brown, edged with white.
+
+Female--The female is much more of an ocher brown than the male, and
+without the stripe on the neck or the lead color of the bill. The top
+of the head and the sides of the neck are streaked with brown; breast,
+spotted with dark brown; under parts, white. While it somewhat
+resembles the female mallard, the much narrower bill and difference of
+the speculum should prevent any error in identification. Besides the
+tail is pointed and the axillars are white, barred with dark brown.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually back a little distance from the
+water's edge and contains from eight to twelve bluish-white eggs.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, male, 28 and female, 22 inches;
+wing, 9-1/2; bill, 2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WOOD DUCK (Aix sponsa)]
+
+
+THE WOOD DUCK
+
+(Aix sponsa)
+
+The wood duck, the handsomest of all the American ducks, is not
+plentiful anywhere, and seems to be growing fewer in numbers.
+Ornithologists class them as resident ducks, breeding throughout their
+range. From my personal experience I believe that they are migratory,
+at least to a considerable extent, for while many flocks of from half
+a dozen to twenty birds can be seen along the timbered portions of the
+Sacramento river during the summer months and the early fall, as well
+as along other wooded streams of the Coast, few are to be seen during
+the shooting season. From this fact I can draw but one conclusion;
+they migrate south in the winter. A few are killed each winter but
+they can only be considered a rare duck whose beauty lends an
+occasional charm to the game bag.
+
+=Color=--Male--The male has a long crest falling down the back of the
+neck and showing a green and purple luster; the bill is red with a
+dark stripe on top; a broad stripe of white commences under the bill
+and passes down the neck, meeting another stripe of white that nearly
+encompasses the neck; sides and front of lower neck, brownish purple,
+dotted with white; back, a bronze green; speculum, bluish purple,
+bordered with black and white.
+
+Female--The general plan of the markings of the female is the same as
+that of the male, but the colors are not so bright, nor the crest so
+long. The crest is more of a brown, and the breast a pale brown,
+mottled with dark spots.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is built in the hollow of a tree or stump,
+and occasionally a considerable distance above the ground. The eggs,
+which average about eight, are of a pale brownish white. The young are
+taken from the nest in the bill of the mother, and are often seen
+perched on her back while she is swimming around in search of food.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length of the male, about 18 inches, with the
+female about an inch less; wing, 9-1/4 to 9-1/2; bill 1 3/8 inches.
+
+
+THE FULVOUS TREE DUCK
+
+(Dendrocygna fulva)
+
+The fulvous tree-duck, commonly called the Mexican tree-duck, and
+cavalier, as well as the black-bellied tree-duck (=Dendrocygna
+autumnalis=), according to the classification of the ornithologist,
+belong to the subfamily, =Anserinae=, the same family as the geese. The
+fact that they have a bill more like that of the goose than any other
+duck, a goose neck also, and that there is no difference in the sexes
+will show the reason for such classification. Their generic name,
+however, signifies tree-swan. The fulvous tree-duck ranges on our
+hunting grounds as far north as Sacramento, where occasionally one is
+killed. They come here only to breed and, therefore, late in the
+season. Quite a few are killed in southern California, and from
+Arizona and Lower California south they are very plentiful. The
+black-bellied tree-duck is only met with as a straggler north of
+Chihuahua, Mexico. Another species of the same genus (=Dendrocygna
+elegans=) is a still more southern bird, seldom seen north of the
+state of Guerrero.
+
+=Color=--Sides of head and neck and lower parts, buff; top of head,
+back of neck and back, dark brown; wings, dark brown; neck, long and
+slim; bill, resembles that of a goose very much. Both sexes alike.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are generally built in a hollow tree or
+stump. The eggs number from ten to fifteen and are of an ochreous
+white.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, about 9-1/2; bill, 1-3/4 inches.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, ANSERES
+
+ Family, ANATIDAE Subfamily, ANATINAE
+
+ (Fresh water ducks)
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Breeding Grounds and Range.
+ --------- ------------- ----------------- ------------------------------
+
+ {boschas Mallard {Throughout the scope of
+ { {this work. Breeds wherever
+ { {found.
+ {
+ {strepera Gadwall {From Central California
+ { {south. Breeds wherever
+ { {found.
+ {
+ { {From British America south.
+ { {Breeds on the mountain
+ {americana Widgeon Baldpate {lakes from California
+ Anas { {south.
+ {
+ { {From British America south.
+ {carolinensis Green-winged teal {Breeds throughout its range.
+ {
+ { {From Central California
+ {cyanoptera Cinnamon teal {south. Breeds from Central
+ { {California to Central Mexico.
+ {
+ {
+ {discors Blue-winged teal {From Arizona south into
+ { {Mexico. Breeds throughout
+ { {its range.
+
+ Spatula clypeata {Shoveller or {From British America south.
+ {Spoon-bill {Breeds on the mountain
+ {lakes from Mexico north.
+
+ Dafila acuta {Pin-tail or {From British America south.
+ {Sprig {Breeds from Central
+ {California north.
+
+ {Along the wooded streams
+ {from Central California
+ Aix sponsa Wood duck {north. Breeds wherever
+ {found.
+
+
+
+
+THE BAY and SEA DUCKS
+
+
+As I have already stated the ducks are divided into two subfamilies,
+the one the =Anatinae=, commonly called fresh-water ducks, the other
+the =Fuligulinae=, commonly known as the salt-water ducks. A
+distinguishing feature of the salt-water ducks is the little flap or
+web on the hind toe, which is not seen in the fresh-water varieties.
+
+On our shooting grounds, however, whether the blind is on the
+salt-water marsh or the fresh-water pond, both kinds are sure to fall
+to the gun in almost equal numbers. Of the more common of the
+fresh-water varieties the gadwall and the mallard are seen the least
+on the salt marshes and the tide overflows, yet even these are quite
+often met with in these places. So it is with the salt-water species.
+All except the scoters are frequenters of the mountain lakes,
+fresh-water ponds and overflows. The red-head, both species of the
+scaups, the canvasback and the ruddy are commonly found on the
+fresh-waters. The ring-neck, and, in fact, the red-head are much more
+common on these waters than on the salt or brackish marshes.
+
+With the exception, therefore, that certain species always predominate
+at a given place at certain times of the season, the sportsman's aim
+brings down a well-assorted bag, let him shoot where he may, on marsh,
+pond or overflow, from Washington to Mexico.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CANVASBACK (Aythya vallisnaria)]
+
+
+THE CANVASBACK
+
+(Aythya vallisneria)
+
+The canvasback, the duck par excellence of the Eastern states, is very
+plentiful in the more northern portions of the territorial scope of
+these articles, though I have seen them in good numbers on the lakes
+of Mexico. It is the general supposition that the canvasback breeds in
+the far north, but from the fact that they are found on the lakes of
+Mexico as early as October, they must also breed on the higher lakes
+of our mountains. On our lower marshes they are a late duck, but they
+appear on our mountain lakes quite early in the season. Canvasback
+shooting on our waters affords the finest of sport, as it does not
+partake so much of flock shooting as it does on the Chesapeake and the
+Delaware rivers. While I certainly prefer our shooting, by no means do
+I prefer our ducks. When killed on the mountain lakes, our canvasback
+possesses nearly if not quite as fine flavor as do those of the
+Eastern states, but when killed on the bays and salt marshes of
+California they are fishy and barely palatable. This is caused by the
+absence of the so-called wild celery, properly tape grass
+(=Vallisneria spiralis=), the common food of the Eastern canvasback.
+Our birds have the habit of feeding largely on the shallow waters of
+the tide lands and marshes and of consuming large quantities of
+crustaceans, such as clams, crabs, mussels and the like, and it takes
+but a few days' diet of this kind to make the canvasback about the
+poorest of ducks. I have killed these ducks on the high lakes and
+ponds of Mexico, when, on account of something they fed upon, they
+were really unfit to eat.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, nearly black; back, light gray; bill,
+black, and forming nearly a straight line from the tip to the crown of
+the head; belly and flanks, nearly white.
+
+Female--Head and neck, cinnamon brown, paler on the throat; back, dark
+gray.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest of the canvasback is generally found on some
+little knoll in the marsh, and is lined with dead grass and feathers,
+and often with considerable down. The eggs, which are about ten in
+number, are of a dark creamy white.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, from 18 to 22 inches; the more northern
+birds within the territory here covered will always be found
+considerably larger than those of the more southern latitudes. Wing, 8
+to 9-1/2 inches, and bill about 2-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: RED-HEAD (Aythya americana)]
+
+
+THE RED-HEAD
+
+(Aythya americana)
+
+The red-head is quite a common duck in the southern sections of the
+Coast hunting grounds. Though purely a bay or salt-water duck, that
+is, belonging to the subfamily =Fuligulinae=, it is not found to any
+great extent on the salt-water marshes, preferring the higher lakes,
+ponds and reservoirs of the mountain valleys and foothills. I found
+them one season in great numbers on the San Rafael marshes, high up in
+the mountains of Lower California, and all the shooting two friends
+and myself wished to do had no effect in driving them away, although
+the ponds of the marsh were few and small.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, reddish chestnut; lower neck and upper
+breast, sooty brown, a mixture of finely penciled lines of gray and
+brown; speculum, gray; back, gray; feathers on the top of the head
+almost form a crest; bill, lead color.
+
+Female--Head and neck, light cinnamon brown, very pale on the sides of
+the head near the bill, and throat nearly white; breast and shoulders,
+dirty light brown, and back a darker dirty brown.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest, like that of the canvasback, is generally
+built in the marsh or on the low banks of a lake, usually lined with
+down and contains about ten eggs of a brownish buff color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 20 inches; wing, 8-1/4 to 8-1/2; bill
+barely 2-1/4 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: AMERICAN SCAUP DUCK OR BLUE-BILL
+ (Aythya marila neartica)]
+
+
+THE AMERICAN SCAUP, OR BLUE-BILL
+
+(Aythya marila neartica)
+
+The American scaup, or blue-bill, the lesser scaup (=Aythya affinis=)
+and the ring-neck (=Aythya collaris=) are very plentiful from
+Washington to Mexico. These three species are generally grouped
+together by the sportsmen of the Coast under the name of black jacks,
+black ducks, black-heads or blue-bills; all three species being
+considered as belonging to the one variety, and the lesser scaup
+(=Aythya affinis=) as the younger birds. With the males, at least,
+there should be no excuse for this error, for they can be easily
+distinguished by the color of the speculum, or bright band on the
+wings, and by the color of the metallic sheen of the head and neck.
+The speculum of the American scaup, or larger blue-bill, is white, the
+head and neck showing a greenish sheen, quite pronounced in the
+sunlight. The lesser scaup, or little blue-bill (=Aythya affinis=) has
+a white speculum also, but the sheen of the head and neck is purple.
+The ring-neck (=Aythya collaris=), has a gray speculum, which, though
+quite light in color, can easily be distinguished from the pure white
+of the other two. The metallic sheen of the head of the ring-neck is a
+dark indigo blue. The bill of the ring-neck is quite different from
+that of the scaups, being much darker in color and more of a sooty
+tinge and with a faint bluish band across it about half an inch from
+the end. The females of all three species resemble each other very
+closely, but the difference in size will generally determine to which
+species they belong. The two blue-bills can be told from the female
+ring-neck by their white speculums. The female ring-neck has the gray
+of the male, but this does not distinguish it from the female
+red-head. The smaller size of the ring-neck and darker appearance of
+the head and neck will always indicate to which species the female
+belongs. The bill of the female red-head meets the skull in quite an
+abrupt manner, while hat of the ring-neck has more of the sloping
+character of the canvasback.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, black, showing a green luster in the
+sun; back, gray, finely lined with black; under parts, white;
+speculum, white.
+
+Female--Head, dead brown, with a light gray patch at the base of the
+bill blending into the brown of the head; breast and back, dirty
+brown; under parts, white; speculum, white; bill, bluish.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is a crude affair near the water's edge,
+containing about ten pale olive-buff eggs.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 18 inches; wing, 8-1/2, and
+bill, 1 7/8 inches. The females are but a trifle smaller.
+
+
+THE LESSER SCAUP, OR LITTLE BLUE-BILL
+
+(Aythya affinis)
+
+The little blue-bill, or lesser scaup, like its larger relative, is a
+cosmopolitan species, and commonly met with in flocks of the other,
+which has led to the common error of classing the two together, the
+one as the elder and the other as the younger birds.
+
+While in general color and markings they are very similar, there is
+so much difference in their size that they should be easily
+distinguished. With the males this is very easy for the head of the
+larger species has a green sheen, the head of the lesser has a purple
+sheen as shown in the sun. The bill of this species is more of a blue
+and much smaller, being not over 1-1/2 inches in length.
+
+=Color=--The color and markings are the same as the American scaup,
+with the exception that the metallic sheen of the head, as already
+mentioned, is purple.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The same as the American scaup.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 16-1/2 inches; wing, 7-1/2,
+and bill 1-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: RING-NECK (Aythya collaris)]
+
+
+THE RING-NECK
+
+(Aythya collaris)
+
+In the breeding season the ring-neck male has a dirty orange ring
+around the neck which disappears wholly, or nearly so, before the
+beginning of the hunting season. The ring-neck is generally more
+plentiful on the fresh waters. I have seen great numbers of them at
+the mouth of the Colorado river. In fact, both the ring-neck and the
+lesser scaup range much farther south than do the larger species, for
+while few of the larger scaup are seen in Mexico, great quantities of
+the little blue-bills are found throughout the republic, especially on
+the salt marshes of the two coasts. All of these three species breed
+along the mountain lakes from California north.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and neck, black, with an indigo sheen when turned
+in the sun. This will always distinguish it from the larger blue-bill
+whose sheen is green and the lesser blue-bill whose sheen is purple.
+The speculum is gray; bill, bluish with a pale blue band across it
+about a half inch from the end.
+
+Female--The female of this species resembles the female of the
+red-head very closely. It is considerable darker, however, and the
+bill joins the head without the marked indentation seen in the
+red-head.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest and eggs are the same as the scaups.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 17-1/2 inches; wing, 8, and bill, 2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: RUDDY DUCK (Erismatura rubida)]
+
+
+THE RUDDY DUCK, OR WIRE-TAIL
+
+(Erismatura rubida)
+
+The ruddy duck is a very common duck on our shooting grounds, from one
+end to the other, though as a rule it is not much sought after by our
+sportsmen. When feeding on the salt marshes they are not very
+palatable, it is true, but when killed on fresh waters they are one of
+our finest flavored ducks, if properly cooked. After refusing many
+shots at these little ducks and even many times failing to carry home
+those I did kill, it remained for Mr. Babcock, then of the Coronado
+Hotel, of San Diego, California, to demonstrate to me the real value
+of the ruddy duck. I was one of the party shooting with him on his
+preserve at Otay dam. When we came into the house after our morning's
+shoot, a most enjoyable one, he asked each member of the party what
+kind of duck he wished for his dinner. Mallards, canvasbacks, sprigs
+and widgeons had been named, so when he came to me I answered that any
+kind would do me. To this he replied: "Then you shall have one of my
+favorites." When dinner was ready, before each plate was a beautifully
+roasted duck of the species chosen by the member of the party for whom
+that plate was laid, but the plates in front of Mr. Babcock and myself
+each contained two plump little birds that I did not recognize in
+their undress uniform. After I had tasted of one, Mr. Babcock asked:
+"How do you like my selection?" "Very much," I answered, "but what are
+they? I never ate anything better." "The much despised ruddy," was his
+reply, "the superior of the canvasback when properly handled." The
+best evidence that I fully endorsed all that he claimed for the ruddy
+duck is the fact that there was nothing left of my two birds but
+well-picked bones. The ruddy duck may well be called a resident
+species over the whole of the Pacific Coast shooting grounds, for they
+breed not only on the lakes and streams, but on the lower marshes as
+well, throughout the whole territory.
+
+The ruddy duck is known by a number of names such as "wire tail,"
+"dipper," "bullet-head," "buffle-head," etc.
+
+=Color=--Male--Top of head, dark brown; sides of head below the eye,
+dirty white; upper parts, brown; no speculum on the wing; axillars,
+very light gray with light brown shafts; tail, broad and stiff with
+the feathers pointed; under parts, dirty white.
+
+Female--Much the color of the male, but more of a dirty brown. Side of
+the head and throat, dirty gray.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are usually built on little hillocks in the
+marshes, and contain from six to eight dirty white eggs.
+
+=Measurements=--The ruddy is a small duck with a very rounded body.
+Total length, about 15 inches; wing, 6, and bill, 1-1/2 inches, strongly
+depressed in the center.
+
+
+ [Illustration: AMERICAN GOLDEN-EYE (Glaucionetta clangula americana)]
+
+
+THE AMERICAN GOLDEN-EYE
+
+(Glaucionetta clangula americana)
+
+The American golden-eye is a visitor from the far north to the
+northern portions of the territory covered by this work. An occasional
+straggler is killed as far south as San Francisco, but they are a cold
+country bird. They are more common in the interior of Washington and
+Oregon than along the coast.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head and upper half of neck, dark green with a metallic
+sheen; a nearly round patch of white between the eye and the base of
+the bill; lower part of neck, most of the back and the under parts,
+white; upper part of the back, rump and tail, black; wings, mostly
+white.
+
+Female--Head and upper neck, brown; gray spot at the base of the bill;
+breast and under parts, gray; back and most of the wings, brownish
+black.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually built in a hollow tree or stump
+and contains about ten eggs of a bluish white color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 19 inches; wing, 9, and
+bill, 1 7/8. Female about one-tenth smaller.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BARROW'S GOLDEN-EYE (Glaucionetta ilandica)]
+
+
+BARROW'S GOLDEN-EYE
+
+(Glaucionetta ilandica)
+
+Barrow's golden-eye is another duck that is seen, but little within
+the Pacific Coast hunting grounds, and only then near the coast
+sections of the northern part. They are found more plentiful on the
+islands along the north Pacific coast.
+
+=Color=--The male resembles the American golden-eye very closely,
+except that the head of the Barrow's is more of a purple, or greenish
+purple. The white at the base of the bill is also different, it being
+a crescent shape instead of round.
+
+The female differs in the head being more of a cinnamon brown, and the
+back more of a gray and slightly mottled with brown.
+
+=Nest, Eggs and Measurements=--The same as the American golden-eye.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BUTTER-BALL (Charitonetta albeola)]
+
+
+THE BUTTER-BALL
+
+(Charitonetta albeola)
+
+The butter-ball, or buffle-head, is another common duck all over the
+country. But where we have so many larger and better ducks they are
+little sought for, and are generally considered poor shooting. Yet I
+recall one occasion when with a friend I was shooting on a couple of
+foothill ponds where many of these little ducks had congregated, they
+furnished us with fine sport. The larger ducks were soon scared away,
+but the little butter-balls would not leave. One of us was stationed
+at each pond and we soon had them all in the air.
+
+=Color=--Male--Head, greenish purple, with a strong metallic luster;
+white patch running from the eye to the back of the head; feathers of
+the head long, forming a crest; back, black; under parts white and a
+broad white patch on the wing.
+
+Female--The female is a very modestly colored bird to have so gaudy a
+mate. Head and upper parts, a dark, dead brown; under parts, white;
+speculum, white; a small, elongated white spot on the side of the
+head.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually built on some elevation such as a
+stump or log; some times in a tree. The eggs, numbering eight to ten,
+are of a pale buff color.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 11 to 12-1/2 inches; wing, about 6, and
+bill, 1 inch.
+
+
+THE OLD SQUAW, OR LONG-TAILED DUCK
+
+(Clangula hyemalis)
+
+The old squaw, or long-tailed duck, comes but little into California,
+though a few are killed each year in Washington and Oregon. I killed
+one several years ago as far south as Los Angeles county, California,
+the only one I have ever known to get that far away from his northern
+home.
+
+=Color=--Male--As the winter plumage is the only garb that one of this
+species will be seen in on these hunting grounds, I will only mention
+it. Head, white, with a patch of brownish black on the side of the
+head and side of the neck; breast, black, continuing over the back;
+belly, white; wings, white; a band of yellow across the bill; central
+tail feathers, black and very long.
+
+Female--Head, white, with a dark patch on the top and on the side;
+breast and back, smoky black; under parts, white; no long feathers in
+the tail.
+
+
+ [Illustration: HARLEQUIN DUCK (Histrionicus histrionicus)]
+
+
+THE HARLEQUIN DUCK
+
+(Histrionicus histrionicus)
+
+The harlequin duck is a northern bird that comes but little into the
+United States on either coast. A few stragglers are met with in Oregon
+and Washington, and an occasional one is killed in California. These
+and the old squaw add a pleasing variety to our mounted collections,
+but nothing to our sport.
+
+=Color=--The accompanying illustration is the best description of this
+duck that can be given, as the colors are white and a brownish black.
+It is about the size of the widgeon.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WHITE-WINGED SCOTER (Oidemia deglandi)]
+
+
+THE SCOTERS
+
+(Oidemia deglandi--Oidemia americana)
+
+The scoters, or coots, as they are called on the Atlantic coast, are
+all found on this coast southward to Mexico. Of these the white-winged
+scoter (=Oidemia deglandi=) is the most common, being found in large
+numbers on all the bays and inlets of the coast as far south as the
+Magdalena bay, Lower California.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, ANSERES
+
+ Family, ANATIDAE Subfamily, FULIGULINAE.
+
+ (Bay and sea ducks)
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range and Breeding Grounds
+ ------------ ------------ ---------------- ----------------------------
+
+ {From Northern Mexico north.
+ {vallisneria Canvasback {Breeds on the higher lakes
+ { {from Eastern Oregon to the
+ { {Arctic.
+ {
+ { {From Central Mexico north.
+ {americana Red-head {Breeds on the interior lakes
+ { {from Eastern Oregon north.
+ {
+ { {American scaup {From Central California
+ {neartica {Blue-bill {north. Breeds on the
+ Aythya { {Black-jack {interior lakes from
+ { {Washington north.
+ {
+ { {Lesser scaup {From northern Mexico north.
+ {affinis {Blue-bill {Breeds on the interior lakes
+ { {Black-jack {from Washington north to the
+ { {Arctic.
+ {
+ { {From Central California north.
+ {collaris {Ring-neck {More common on fresh waters.
+ { {Black-jack {Breeds on the interior lakes
+ { {from Oregon to the Arctic.
+
+ {americana American {Rare south of Oregon. Breeds
+ { golden-eye {from northern Washington
+ { {north.
+ {
+ Glaucionetta { {Very rare south of Puget
+ {islandica Barrows {Sound. Found only along the
+ golden-eye {coast. Breed on the
+ {Aleutian Islands and Alaska
+ {coast.
+
+ {From Central Mexican coast
+ Charitonetta albeola {Buffle-head {north. Breeds along the
+ {Butter-ball {coast from Washington north.
+
+ {From Central Mexico north.
+ Erismatura rubida {Ruddy duck {Breeds on the mountain lakes
+ {Wire-tail {throughout its range.
+
+ {From the Lower California
+ {americana {Americas scoter {coast north. Breeds on the
+ { {Black coot {Aleutian Islands and the
+ { {Alaska coast.
+ Oidemia {
+ {deglandi {White-winged {From the Lower California
+ {scoter {coast north. Breeds on the
+ {White-winged {Aleutian Islands and the
+ {coot {Alaska coast.
+
+
+
+
+THE GEESE OF THE PACIFIC COAST
+
+
+The hunting grounds of the Pacific Coast have a greater variety of
+geese than any other section of America. Here are to be found every
+species known to the Eastern states, except the barnacle brant of the
+Atlantic. But in return for the absence of this species of sea brant
+we have the black sea brant, the white-cheeked goose, the ross goose,
+the emperor goose (none of which are found east of the Rocky
+Mountains) and the hutchins goose, the lesser snow goose, the
+white-fronted goose and the little brown brant, which are only
+stragglers east of the Mississippi valley, and only sparingly seen
+that far east. Thus it will be seen that within the Pacific Coast
+hunting grounds there are four genera and nine species of the goose
+family. All of these are found in the northern parts of these hunting
+grounds, but only about one-half of them visit the southern parts.
+Increased areas of cultivation, the drainage of vast sections of
+marshy lands and the absence of laws for their protection have greatly
+reduced the once wonderful supply.
+
+Acres of geese sounds fabulous, yet miles of geese is the only
+expression which conveys an adequate idea of the wonderful numbers in
+which these birds were seen on the Coast half a century ago. The great
+majority of the geese of the Coast at that time were of the white
+varieties, and it is a veritable fact that in California, and
+especially in the Sacramento, San Joaquin and Los Angeles valleys,
+these geese congregated during the winter months in such numbers as to
+whiten the plains for miles. Many flocks of honkers were mixed with
+them, as well as some of the other darker varieties. These darker
+species of the family, however, were far more plentiful in the
+northern parts of the State than in the southern. That part of the
+Sacramento valley known as the Maine Prairies has always been a
+favorite feeding place for the Canada goose and its subspecies.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CANADA GOOSE BROWN BRANT
+ (Branta canadensis) (Branta minima)]
+
+
+THE CANADA GOOSE, OR HONKER
+
+(Branta canadensis)
+
+The Canada goose, or honker as it is commonly called, was and is quite
+common on the Coast. This goose, the largest of the Americans, has a
+wide distribution, ranging from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from
+the Arctic to Central America. They breed as far south as southern ern
+Oregon, at any rate, and possibly on the higher mountain lakes as far
+south as Mexico, for they seem to make their appearance on the Coast
+shooting grounds of Mexico nearly, if not quite, as early as they do
+here.
+
+The flesh of the Canada goose is the equal if not the superior of the
+tame goose. Its flight, except when migrating long distances, is
+generally low, and in such cases it can be called by the hunter to
+within shooting distance.
+
+=Color=--Head and neck, black, with a white stripe running from the
+chin back of the eye to near the top of the head; upper parts, dark
+brownish gray; breast, dull, light gray, grading into white at the
+abdomen; tail and wings, black. Both sexes alike.
+
+=Eggs and Nest=--The nest is generally built of sticks and grass,
+lined with feathers, and either in the marshes or on the banks of a
+stream, and rarely if ever contain more than six or seven, and often
+not more than four, eggs of a very light brownish white.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, about 19 inches; bill, about 1-3/4 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WHITE-CHEEKED GOOSE (Branta canadensis occidentalis)]
+
+
+THE WHITE-CHEEKED GOOSE
+
+(Branta canadensis occidentalis)
+
+The white-cheeked goose, known also as Mexican goose, is found only on
+the Pacific Coast and never east of the Cascades in Washington and
+Oregon, or the Sierra Nevadas in California. In fact, they are
+generally confined to localities not far from the ocean. While both
+the honker and the Hutchins goose have a white cheek, the white of the
+honker meets under the chin or blends into a gray, but the white of
+the white-cheeked variety is separated either with a distinct black
+stripe under the chin or a mottled black and white one. Also the black
+of the neck of the white-cheeked goose and the brownish gray of the
+breast is very generally separated by a white collar, though sometimes
+this is so faint as to be almost indistinguishable.
+
+The white-cheeked goose is rarely seen south of Monterey Bay,
+California.
+
+=Color=--Same as the Canada goose, except that the white on the cheeks
+is either separated under the chin by a black stripe or by only a very
+few white feathers in the black. Between the neck and the dull gray of
+the breast is a narrow white stripe, or collar. This some times is
+very faint, and, in fact, some times, though very rarely, absent. This
+absence of the collar is quite likely caused by its inter-grading with
+the Hutchins goose.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The same as the Canada goose.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, never more than 16 inches; bill, not more
+than 1-1/4 inches.
+
+
+THE HUTCHINS GOOSE
+
+(Branta canadensis hutchinsii)
+
+We have on the Pacific Coast four varieties of the =Branta
+canadensis=, or that species to which belongs the Canada goose, all
+resembling each other closely except in size. Two of these species are
+generally considered honkers by most of our sportsmen, while others
+have two or three local names for them, among which are Mexican goose
+and Lower California goose. The fact is that while the Canada goose is
+quite common on the coasts of Mexico, neither the Hutchins goose nor
+the white-cheeked goose migrate that far south.
+
+The Hutchins goose so closely resembles the Canada goose, or honker as
+it is popularly called, that it is principally distinguished by its
+smaller size and a considerable difference in the call. The Hutchins
+goose ranges as far east as the Mississippi valley, and on the Pacific
+Coast south only to about Santa Barbara county, California. This is
+one of the two varieties that is given the local names of Mexican and
+Lower California goose.
+
+=Color=--Same as the Canada goose, from which it is only distinguished
+by its smaller size and a considerable difference in its call.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--Same as the Canada goose.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, not more than 17 inches; bill, 1-1/2 inches.
+
+
+THE CACKLING GOOSE, OR BROWN BRANT
+
+(Branta canadensis minima)
+
+The cackling goose, known also as brown brant and gray brant, is the
+most common of the four varieties and much the smallest. (See
+illustration.) Its markings are the same as the Canada goose, but its
+under parts are somewhat darker. While in total length it is fully
+half that of the honker, in weight it is not more than one-third. The
+cackling geese are commonly found in flocks of the white geese, both
+in their feeding and their migrations. This species ranges east as far
+as the Mississippi valley and south on the Coast as far as the mouth
+of the Colorado river and to some extent into Lower California. It is
+more numerous than any other of the dark colored geese of the Pacific
+Coast.
+
+=Color=--The same as the Canada goose, with the exception that it is a
+little darker on the under parts.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The same as the Canada goose, but the eggs number as
+high as ten.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, 13 to 14-1/2 inches; bill, from one to one and
+one-eighth.
+
+
+ [Illustration: LESSER SNOW GOOSE ROSS GOOSE
+ (Chen hyperborea) (Chen rossi)]
+
+
+THE SNOW GOOSE, OR WHITE GOOSE
+
+(Chen hyperborea)
+
+The lesser snow geese, commonly called white geese, are the larger of
+the two species of white geese so numerous on the Coast. They not only
+feed, but migrate in great flocks, and these migrations often take
+place at night when their sharp cries will be heard high in the air.
+The lesser snow goose is found as far east as the Mississippi valley
+and south on the Pacific Coast to San Diego. Occasionally a few are
+seen at Ensenada and the valley of the Palms in Lower California. The
+meat is tough and poor in flavor and, therefore, they are hunted but
+little except by the market hunters, who, somehow, succeed in selling
+a good number of them to the uninitiated.
+
+=Color=--Pure white, with black bill and legs; the primaries, or long
+feathers of the wings, are black.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are made close to the water's edge and
+contain about ten dirty white eggs.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, about 16 inches; bill, 2-1/4 inches.
+
+
+THE ROSS GOOSE LITTLE WHITE GOOSE
+
+(Chen rossii)
+
+The Ross goose has been given the name of China goose by many who
+wanted some distinguishing nomenclature for them, when in fact the
+Ross goose is purely an American Pacific Coast bird. Like the snow
+goose it is pure white with black primary plumes. Young birds of both
+species are occasionally seen in the early part of the season more or
+less mottled on the breast with yellowish gray feathers. The Ross
+goose is only about half the size of the snow goose. Aside from this
+it can always be known by the warty appearance of the upper half of
+the bill. They are commonly seen, both in feeding and in their
+migrations, mixed in the flocks of the snow geese. Occasionally they
+are seen as far east as Utah and Montana, but only in small numbers.
+The Ross goose migrates as far south as Central Mexico, great numbers
+of them congregating on Lake Chapala, in the state of Jalisco.
+
+=Color=--Same as the snow goose.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, about 14 inches; bill, 2-1/4, with warty
+excresences on the upper part.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE, OR SPECKLE-BREAST
+ (Anser albifrons gambeli)]
+
+
+WHITE FRONTED GOOSE
+
+(Anser albifrons gambeli)
+
+The white-fronted goose, or speckle-breast as it is commonly called,
+is quite common on the Coast south to Mexico, where great numbers
+congregate on Lake Chapala, Jalisco. This is another western species,
+though ranging to some extent as far east as the Mississippi valley
+and an occasional flock wanders even to the Atlantic coast. The
+breasts of the old birds are commonly profusely speckled with black
+feathers. The white-fronted goose is a little more exclusive in its
+habits than any of the others named, being generally found in flocks
+by themselves. As a table bird the meat is quite palatable, and large
+numbers are sold in the markets.
+
+=Color=--Head, grayish brown, with a white spot at the junction of the
+bill, but this is absent from the young birds; neck, lighter, shading
+into white or dull white on the breast, mottled with black; back, ashy
+gray, edged with brown; shafts of the quills, white; bill and legs,
+light pink.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually well made and lined with feathers
+and down. The eggs number about seven or eight, and are of a pale
+greenish white.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, 16 inches; bill, 2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: EMPEROR GOOSE (Philacte canagica)]
+
+
+THE EMPEROR GOOSE
+
+(Philacte canagica)
+
+The Emperor goose is a north Pacific species, breeding principally on
+the islands of the Alaska coast. The great majority of these birds
+winter well to the north of us, though a number venture southward into
+California to Humboldt bay and even south of that. A small flock or
+two is seen almost every winter on the marshes near San Francisco. A
+close watch of the markets will reveal one or two offered for sale
+almost every winter.
+
+=Color=--Head and back of neck, white; throat, brownish gray, shading
+into light gray on the breast and abdomen; back, a little darker; the
+feathers being gray, tipped with lighter gray, with a subterminal band
+of brownish gray; legs, flesh color.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are usually found on the small islands of
+the salt marshes, and contain eight to ten eggs of a dull white color.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, about 15-1/2 inches; bill, 1-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BLACK SEA BRANT (Branta nigricans)]
+
+
+THE BLACK SEA BRANT
+
+(Branta nigricans)
+
+The black sea brant is another purely Pacific Coast species, found
+nowhere else except as a straggler. They resemble the barnacle brant
+of the Atlantic (=Branta barnicla=) except in the shape of the head
+and bill. A differing characteristic, however, is that the white
+speckling on the sides of the neck of the barnacle brant extends all
+around the front of the neck in the case of the black sea brant. As
+their name implies, these are purely seabirds, rarely flying over the
+land even, and only found in such bays as produce the eel grass on
+which they feed almost exclusively. I only know of the following
+places within the Pacific Coast shooting grounds where the black sea
+brant is found. These are: Puget sound, Washington; Coos bay, Oregon;
+Humboldt, Tomales, Moro and San Diego bays, California, and Magdalena
+bay, Lower California. In most of these places they ate plentiful
+during the winter season. Of all birds that fall to the aim of the
+sportsman, the black sea brant is the most difficult to get within
+range of. This is only accomplished by great caution and a good deal
+of strategy, but when they are brought to bag the reward is a full
+compensation, for of all the waterfowl their flesh is the most
+delicious. The sea brant is rarely found away from the haunts
+mentioned, yet the bird from which the accompanying illustration was
+made was killed from a small flock that had strayed into the lower end
+of San Francisco bay, near Redwood City, and was mounted by that
+accomplished sportsman and taxidermist, Chase Littlejohn, of that
+place.
+
+=Color=--General color, black; throat, with a white or speckled ring
+all around the neck, except a small portion of the back; flanks,
+mottled white and black; under tail feathers, white.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is only a depression on the ground, but
+nicely lined with down. The eggs, numbering six to eight, are of a
+dull white.
+
+=Measurements=--Wing, 13 inches; bill, 1-1/2 inches.
+
+
+THE SWANS
+
+(Olor columbianus) and (Olor buccinator)
+
+(Subfamily, CYGNINAE)
+
+Both the whistling swan (=Olor columbianus=) and the trumpeter swan
+(=Olor buccinator=) were once very plentiful on the Pacific Coast
+hunting grounds, as far south as central California, and especially so
+on the Columbia river and the lakes of Oregon and Washington. A few
+were met with also as far south as San Diego county, California.
+
+I shall never forget the first two swans I ever killed and my
+experience with them. It was the first winter after I came to
+California and I was living in Los Angeles, then a little Mexican
+village, and three of us were doing our own housekeeping. Whatever the
+reason--most likely from some hallucination of boyhood--I entertained
+the belief that swans must be exceedingly fine eating. As I prided
+myself then, just after crossing the plains, upon being a good cook,
+great preparations were made for an extra fine feast on what I fancied
+would be a delicious bird. We had a good stove and the first of the
+two swans was carefully "stuffed" with the choicest dressing,
+consisting of the combined suggestions of the three of us. It was
+placed in the oven, the fire carefully tended and the magnificent bird
+repeatedly "basted." When it was ready and placed on the table it fell
+to my lot to do the carving. Having drawn my knife across the
+hunger-producing carcass without making any perceptible impression, I
+decided that it must be the fault of a dull knife. Among our table
+furnishings we had no sharpening steel, a scythe stone doing service
+in its stead. I hunted this up and began on the knife with the
+"mower's challenge" stroke and soon had an edge that would have cut
+through anything less than an eighty-pound rail. With no little effort
+I amputated the legs and the wings, and cutting a generous piece from
+one side of the breast passed it to one of my companions, who at once
+began on it with his knife. A few attempts to sever it and he reached
+for the scythe stone. Then when he began chewing on the segregated
+piece he declared that it was not cooked enough. A dispute followed as
+to whether it is over-cooking or under-cooking that makes a bird
+tough. With this momentous question still unsettled we decided that
+some of the many ingredients that we had put into the "stuffing" must
+have given the meat its sole-leather consistency. We had a couple of
+hounds, whose teeth had been well tested in many a coyote kill, and we
+passed this first swan up to them.
+
+The next day the other bird was worked into a fine stew and well
+cooked. When served the stew was fine. The dumplings were light and
+fairly melted in our mouths; the red peppers were hot; the aroma of
+onions was just of that degree to suggest the ambrosia of the gods;
+but the swan! Well, the hounds ate it through the compulsion of
+hunger.
+
+A half-grown swan, however, is very good eating.
+
+There is very little difference in the two varieties. The whistling
+swan being more of a northern bird, rarely migrating as far south as
+central California. About the only noticeable difference is that the
+whistling swan has a small yellow spot at the V-shaped point of the
+bill where it meets the eye.
+
+
+
+
+THE WADERS AND SHORE BIRDS
+
+
+The Pacific Coast is especially rich in waders and shore birds, there
+being upwards of forty species that are more or less common, with some
+ten or more that are occasional visitors. Of these few can be
+considered game birds, while others are so small that they are rarely
+shot by our sportsmen. Many of both the waders and the shore birds are
+constant residents. Others come from still farther south for breeding
+purposes, while still others breed north of us and migrate throughout
+the territorial scope of these articles to spend their winters.
+
+The shore birds, while very common, are hunted but little by the
+sportsmen of this region, and many of the smaller species that are
+considered quite a delicacy by our eastern brethren are passed by
+entirely by our lovers of the gun. The reasons for this will be
+obvious to all who have read the preceding pages and noted the
+abundance and great variety of larger and better game. By better game
+I mean birds that furnish better sport by requiring more skill in
+approaching them and better marksmanship in bringing them to bag. The
+little mountain plover, of the southern part of the Coast, while not
+surpassed even by the jack snipe as a table delicacy, are hunted but
+little, even where they are very abundant, because there is little
+sport to be had in shooting them. And the same is true, in a great
+measure, of several other species. Sportsmen, therefore, are little
+acquainted with these birds either as to their names, gastronomic
+merits or means of identification.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WHITE-FACED GLOSSY IBIS (Plegadis gaurauna)]
+
+
+THE HERONS and IBISES
+
+(Order, HERODIONES)
+
+
+While none of the order =Herodiones=, which includes the storks,
+herons, ibises and bitterns, can be considered game birds, they are so
+common about our waters, and some of them add such a charm to the
+scene by their beautiful plumage and graceful movement, that mention
+of some of them here will not be out of place.
+
+The great blue heron (=Ardea herodias=) is the most common of these
+waders. With his long, gracefully curved neck and slender legs he
+wades with stately mien along the shallow waters of the lakes,
+marshes and streams, both summer and winter, for he is to the manner
+born and has no desire to seek other lands or other climes. The herons
+are said to be destructive to fish. This can be to a limited extent
+only, for they subsist very largely on the enemies of the fish,
+destroying hundreds of snakes, water lizards and other fish
+destroyers.
+
+The snowy heron, or white crane as it is commonly called (=Ardea
+candidissima=), is another handsome wader that lends a charm to the
+lakes, ponds and streams from Oregon south through Mexico. Built on
+the same graceful lines as its blue relative, and with a plumage as
+white as the purest snow, it never fails to attract attention.
+
+Three representatives of the family =Ibididae= are found here and
+present a pleasing and interesting group.
+
+The white-faced glossy ibis (=Plegadis guarauna=) ranges over the
+larger portion of the Coast, but from Lower California north only for
+breeding purposes. Its long curved bill, slim, gracefully bent neck,
+shapely body, tall legs and irridescent reflections of its plumage in
+the sunlight, place it among the most attractive of North American
+birds. Unlike the herons they are gregarious and are, therefore, seen
+in flocks of varying size. The glossy ibis is often called bronze
+curlew, but this is a bad misnomer, as they are in no way related to
+the curlew.
+
+Another of the family is the white ibis (=Guara alba=). These are
+quite common in Lower California and Mexico. They rarely migrate into
+California, though they venture much to the north of us in a
+northeastern direction, reaching the shores of the Great Salt Lake,
+during the breeding season. The scarlet ibis (=Guara rubra=), the
+other member of the family, is confined to Mexico, so far as these
+articles are concerned.
+
+The American egret (=Ardea egretta=) ranges from Oregon south to South
+America. It was at one time quite plentiful in California, but its
+handsome plumes attracted the eye of the milliner, which in turn
+aroused the cupidity of the market hunter, and these beautiful birds
+are now rare north of Lower California and Mexico, and are rapidly
+decreasing even there. The reddish egret (=Ardea rufescens=) is an
+inhabitant of Lower California and Mexico, not coming north of these
+places. Though not as handsome as the white egret, it is also being
+exterminated for the same purposes.
+
+The birds that I have so far mentioned, while not game birds, are so
+constantly before the eyes of the sportsmen who engage in waterfowl
+shooting that they can not help but be interested in them. They add a
+variety and a beauty to the scene, and many an hour's wait, that
+otherwise would have been tedious, has passed away pleasantly in
+watching the graceful movements of some one or more of these stately
+waders.
+
+
+
+
+THE CRANES, RAILS, GALLINULES
+
+
+To the order, =Paludicolae=, belong the cranes, rails, gallinules and
+coots, or mudhens, as they are commonly called. Of the members of this
+order we are concerned only with the cranes, rails and coots. The
+sandhill crane (=Grus canadensis) is a common visitor to all parts of
+the Coast, but more plentiful in the interior valleys than near the
+seashore. They are generally hard to approach and for that reason they
+are but little hunted by our sportsmen. The whooping crane (=Grus
+americana) once common throughout the middle states, is still met with
+to considerable extent in Mexico, but it is by no means a common
+visitor.
+
+The California clapper rail, known also as the San Mateo rail (=Rallus
+obsoletus=), is the largest as well as the most important of the rail
+family in this section. At one time the clapper rail was very
+plentiful in certain localities in California and furnished abundant
+sport, though rather of a tame nature, to those who hunted them. Being
+an easy bird to kill and unsuspicious, they have been rapidly reduced
+in numbers until now they are in danger of extinction unless laws are
+enacted giving them better protection. The clapper is only a straggler
+south of San Francisco bay.
+
+The Virginia rail (=Rallus virginianus=), a species not more than half
+the size of the clapper rail, is found sparingly over the Coast, but
+principally on the fresh water marshes.
+
+The little yellow rail (=Porzana noveboracensis=) is found on the
+fresh waters from central California south, but it is nowhere
+abundant.
+
+The black rail (=Porzana jamaicensis=) is another of the smaller rails
+that are found on the fresh waters to a limited extent. Both this and
+the last preceding one are so small that they are seldom shot, though
+as an article of food they are very delicate.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHORE BIRDS
+
+(Order, LIMICOLAE)
+
+
+The order =Limicolae=, which is composed of the shore birds proper,
+is abundantly represented. They are seen wading in the shallow waters,
+carefully watching for worms, insects and other species of food upon
+which they live, boring in the soft mud, scurrying in flocks from
+place to place, or running along the beach as the surf recedes,
+picking up the jetsam of the sea, then taking wing or running back
+like a playful child to the higher ground as the foaming crest of the
+next breaker rushes up the sandy shingle. Or, as is the case of the
+phalaropes and some others, they may be seen riding lightly upon the
+restless billows far out at sea. Modest in coloring and plain in
+plumage, the shore birds seem to belong to the plebeians of the
+avafauna, for they are constant workers, always busy, always plying
+their slender legs rapidly as they hurry from one spot to another,
+never idle, never resting for a moment.
+
+Of the shore birds there are six families and twenty genera
+represented on the Coast. Most of them are quite abundant from
+Washington to Mexico on their respective feeding grounds.
+
+
+ [Illustration:
+ WILSON SNIPE, OR JACK-SNIPE DOWITCHER
+ (Gallinago delicata) (Macrorhamphus scolopaceus)]
+
+
+THE WILSON, OR JACK SNIPE
+
+(Gallinago delicata)
+
+Of all the shore birds the jack snipe, English snipe or Wilson snipe
+as it is variously called, is the most highly prized as a table
+delicacy and furnishes the best sport with the dog and gun. Usually
+lying well for the dog, erratic in its flight and quick on the wing,
+the Wilson snipe is one of the most difficult birds to bring to bag.
+It is not only erratic in its flight, but it is erratic in its nature
+as well. One day it will be found on a given feeding ground in
+abundance and on the next not one is to be seen, while possibly the
+day following they are there again in great numbers. To this
+uncertainty and the corkscrew flight, peculiar to it alone, is due
+much of the charm that jack snipe shooting affords. While these birds
+are commonly called jack snipe or English snipe, their proper name is
+Wilson snipe, but like the rose, no matter what the name, they are
+just as gamy and just as delicious. The Wilson snipe migrates here to
+but little extent, and these migrations are altitudinal rather than
+latitudinal. They breed commonly in all the mountain valleys and even
+as low down as on the Sacramento marshes south of the city of the same
+name. I found a pair breeding a few years ago in the low hills of San
+Luis Obispo county not half a mile from the ocean beach.
+
+=Color=--Head, black, with a central stripe of brown; back, a mixture
+of dark brown, pale brown, yellow and dull white; greater
+wing-coverts, dark brown, tipped with white; throat, dull white,
+barred with brown; a dark stripe running from the base of the bill
+across the eye to the occiput; under parts of the wings, dull white,
+barred with black; tail feathers, dark brown, tipped with white, and
+with a sub-terminal bar of black. No web between the toes.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is a very crude affair made on the ground
+and with but little lining of any kind. It contains from three to four
+grayish eggs, blotched with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 11 inches; wing, 5-1/2; bill, 3 inches.
+
+
+THE DOWITCHER, OR RED-BREASTED SNIPE
+
+(Macrorhampus scolopaceus)
+
+Though not of the same genus, the closet relative to the Wilson snipe
+is the dowitcher or red-breasted snipe. By many who are not accustomed
+to the Wilson snipe and its many vagaries, the red-breasted snipe is
+often mistaken for the former. The red-breasted snipe may easily be
+distinguished by the small web between the outer and middle toes. This
+species of the dowitcher is a western bird, breeding well to the north
+and migrating south to Mexico.
+
+=Color=--Head and back, more of a gray than the Wilson snipe, with the
+feathers edged with a pale buff; light gray stripe running from the
+base of the bill over the eye to the occiput; chin, dull white;
+breast, gray, with a tinge of cinnamon red; tail, banded with dark
+brown; a small web between the outer and middle toes, extending about
+one-fourth down the outer toe.
+
+=Eggs and Nest=--Nest made on the ground and containing from three to
+four dull white eggs.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 10-1/2 inches; wing, 5-3/4; bill, about 2-1/2
+inches, and with a considerable swelling at the end.
+
+
+ [Illustration: GREATER YELLOW-LEGS (Totanus melanoleucus)]
+
+
+THE GREATER YELLOW-LEGS
+
+(Totanus melanoleucus)
+
+The greater yellow-legs migrates throughout the entire region, being
+common on the beaches of Washington, Oregon and California during the
+fall and early winter as it works its way to Lower California and
+Mexico. It somewhat resembles the godwit in coloring, but it is more
+of a grayish tinge. Its shorter bill--not over two and a half inches
+in length--will always distinguish it from the godwit. So, also, will
+its sharp whistling note. It is nearly as delicate a table bird as the
+Wilson snipe.
+
+=Color=--Top of head and neck, brown, with whitish streaks; back,
+brown, with the feathers edged with white; chin, white; breast, white,
+lined with narrow streaks of brown; bill, black, and legs, yellow.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are built close to the water's edge,
+containing four light buff eggs, spotted with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 14 inches; wing, 7-3/4; bill, 2-1/4, to
+2-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: MARLIN OR GODWIT (Limosa fedoa)]
+
+
+THE MARLIN, OR MARBLED GODWIT
+
+(Limosa fedoa)
+
+The marbled godwit, or marlin as it is also called, is one of the
+largest birds of the =Scolopacidae= family. It ranges from Alaska to
+Central America. This species is seen in large numbers in the early
+fall along the sea beaches of California as they are working their way
+south. They spend the winter in great quantities in Lower California
+and Mexico. There should be no difficulty in distinguishing the godwit
+from any of the other shore birds, its long upward curved bill and
+brownish-barred back being features by which it may always be known.
+
+=Color=--Top of head and back of neck, brown, streaked with paler
+brown; feathers of the back, brown, with ochreous edges; throat and
+forehead, pale buff, with faint markings of brown; bill slightly
+turned upward.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--Nest a crude affair on the ground, containing four
+eggs of an ash color, mottled with a dead brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 19 inches; wing, 8-3/4; bill, about 4
+inches.
+
+
+THE RED-BACKED SANDPIPER
+
+(Tringa alpina pacifica)
+
+The red-backed sandpiper, or American dunlin, is one of the larger
+members of the genus and quite plentiful on the Coast marshes, but it
+is seldom seen in the interior valleys except during its migrations.
+In its winter plumage, in which our sportsmen see it, it is of a dull
+light gray color. A diagnostic feature of this species is the slightly
+downward curved bill.
+
+=Color=--Head and upper parts, light gray, with a white stripe over
+the eye; shafts of the feathers are dark brown, producing a streaky
+appearance. In its summer plumage the head and back are reddish brown,
+wings brownish and abdomen black.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--Nests on the ground without lining. Eggs, bluish
+white, with brown spots.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 8-1/2 inches; wing, 4-3/4; bill, 1 5/8.
+
+
+THE WILLET
+
+(Symphemia Semipalmata inornata)
+
+The willet, or stone curlew as it is sometimes called, is a resident
+species, breeding from Washington to Mexico. It is a western bird,
+ranging eastward to the Mississippi valley, where it is but a
+straggler. In size it is nearly as large as the marlin. Its black
+wings, with broad, white patches, and feet webbed for about half the
+length of the toes, are distinguishing features, easily recognized. It
+is generally found on the salt marshes.
+
+=Color=--The general color of the plumage is ashy white or light gray,
+usually with some light buff markings on the breast. When flying it
+shows a broad, white patch on the wings, caused by the upper part of
+the primaries and part of the secondaries being white. Its smoky black
+axillars will always distinguish it.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is any place on the ground where it can
+deposit three or four pale buff eggs, spotted with dark brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 15-1/2 inches; wing, 8-1/2; bill, 2-1/2
+to 2-3/4 inches.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, LIMICOLAE
+
+ Family SCOLOPACIDAE.
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range and Breeding
+ Grounds
+ ------------- --------------- ----------------- -------------------
+
+ {Wilson snipe {Throughout the
+ { {marshes of the coast.
+ Gallinago delicata {Jack snipe {Breeds in the
+ { {mountain valleys.
+
+ {Dowitcher {Along the fresh waters
+ { {of the interior
+ Macrorhamphus scolopaceus {Red-breasted {valleys. Breeds in
+ { snipe {British Columbia
+ { {and Alaska.
+
+ { {From the Central
+ {Red-backed {Mexican coast north.
+ Tringa pacifica {sandpiper {Breeds from
+ { {Washington north.
+
+ {Marble godwit {Early and late
+ { {migrant along the
+ Limosa fedoa {Marlin {coast from Mexico
+ {north. Breeds in
+ {the far north.
+
+ {Early and late
+ {migrant along the
+ {coast, passing the
+ Totanus melanoleucus Yellow-legs {winter in Southern
+ {California and Mexico.
+ {Breeds in the mountain
+ {valleys.
+
+ {semipalmata {From Mexico north.
+ Symphemia {inornata {Western Willet {Breeds throughout
+ {its range.
+
+ {Early and late migrant.
+ {longirostris {Jack curlew {Winters in Southern
+ { {California and Mexico.
+ { {Breeds throughout its
+ { {range.
+ {
+ Numenius { {Long-billed {Same habits as the
+ { { curlew {long-billed and
+ { { {usually found with it.
+ {hudsonicus { {But breeds farther
+ {Hudsonian curlew {north.
+
+
+ [Illustration: HUDSONIAN CURLEW LONG-BILLED CURLEW
+ (Numenius hudsonicus) (Numenius longirostris)]
+
+
+THE LONG-BILLED CURLEW
+
+(Numenius longirostris)
+
+The long-billed curlew, or sickle bill as it is often called, is a
+plentiful resident in all suitable localities. The young birds mature
+early and find their way to the marshes during August, when the season
+for their killing should begin. At this time and even during the month
+of September they are quite palatable, but later they become strong in
+flavor. In these months they feed largely upon the seeds and insects
+to be found on the plains, but later they confine themselves
+principally to the marshes. They breed near the mountain lakes and
+streams and even to considerable extent on the lower grounds. A glance
+at the accompanying illustration will be sufficient to enable the
+uninitiated to always know a curlew.
+
+=Color=--Head, back of neck and back, dark brown, mottled with buff;
+throat and under parts, pale buff, the feathers on the breast being
+streaked with brown; axillars, reddish brown.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually made on the ground in tall grass
+and back some distance from the marsh. The eggs are about four and of
+an olive gray, spotted with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, without the bill, which varies very
+much, about 20 inches; wing, 9 to 11; bill, from four to eight inches,
+and bent downwards, with nearly as much curve as a sickle; in most
+specimens the bill will be about six inches in length.
+
+
+THE HUDSONIAN CURLEW
+
+(Numenius hudsonicus)
+
+The Hudsonian curlew, or jack curlew, by which name it is also known,
+is also a common visitor to our hunting grounds. It is often seen
+mixed with flocks of the preceding species, which leads many to
+suppose that they are the younger birds of that species. Unlike the
+long-billed, the Hudsonian curlew is not a resident species, or, at
+least, not to so great an extent, although it makes its appearance on
+our marshes quite early in the season, even as far south as central
+California. In markings the two species are almost identical, with the
+exception that the Hudsonian is somewhat paler in shade. Any doubt
+arising as to which species a specimen may belong can easily be
+settled by an examination of the axillar plumes. If a long-bill, these
+feathers will be a solid reddish-brown, but if a Hudsonian, they will
+be of a pale buff color barred with a dull-brown, the buff and brown
+being nearly of the same width. Both species become less common north
+of southern California during the late winter months.
+
+=Color=--Same as the long-billed curlew, except that it is a little
+paler on the under parts, and the mottling shows more distinctly on
+the back. The axillars are pale buff, distinctly barred with light
+brown.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The same as the long-billed curlew.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, including bill, which varies but little
+in this species, about 17 inches; wing, 9, and bill about 3-1/2 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER (Charadrius squatarola)]
+
+
+BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER
+
+(Charadrous squaterola)
+
+The largest of the family =Charadridae= is the black-bellied plover. In
+its plumage, both summer and winter, it closely resembles the golden
+plover, as the black on the sides of the head, front of neck, breast
+and abdomen disappear from both species in their winter plumage. But,
+notwithstanding this, they can easily be distinguished by the small
+rudimentary hind toe of the black-bellied species, the other having
+but three toes. A few specimens of the golden plover have been taken
+on the Coast, but it is of rare occurrence. The black-bellied plover
+is reasonably common along the coast line, but it is not seen to any
+great extent in the interior valleys.
+
+=Color=--Upper plumage, dull brown, mottled with gray, the top of the
+head being somewhat darker; under parts, nearly white and the sides
+and breast streaked with brown. In the summer the throat and belly are
+black.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is usually made on the uplands, where four
+eggs are deposited of a pale olive, spotted with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 11 inches; wing, 7-1/2, and bill,
+1-1/4 inches.
+
+
+ [Illustration:
+ SNOWY PLOVER MOUNTAIN PLOVER RING-NECK PLOVER
+ (AEgialitis nivosa) (AEgialitis montana) (AEgialitis semipalmata)]
+
+
+THE MOUNTAIN PLOVER
+
+(AEgialitis montana)
+
+The mountain plover is very plentiful on the plains of southern
+California during the winter months. This little bird as a table
+delicacy is not surpassed by any of the long list of shore birds. In
+fact it is preferred by many to the far-famed jack snipe. It is an
+upland bird, feeding largely on insects, and rarely found near the
+marshes whether salt or fresh-water. In its winter plumage, as seen
+here, its underparts are white with the breast and upper parts of a
+brownish gray.
+
+=Color=--Throat, breast and under parts, white; the rest of the
+plumage, light buffish gray; sometimes the breast will show a slight
+tinge of buff; axillars, white; bill, black. Three toes without web.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are placed on the uplands and contain three
+grayish eggs, spotted with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 8-3/4 inches; wing, 6, and
+bill, 9/10 of an inch.
+
+
+THE SNOWY PLOVER
+
+(AEgialitis nivosa)
+
+The snowy plover is quite common from northern California to Mexico.
+It is a small bird and, while it is hunted but little, its flesh is
+quite delicate. In its winter plumage it is much lighter in color
+than any of the others named.
+
+=Color=--Top of head, back of neck and back, buffish gray; forehead
+and under parts, white; a patch of dull brown just above the white of
+the forehead, and another of the same color on each side of the
+throat. Three toes without web.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nests are found throughout its range; they are
+nothing more than a depression in the sand and contain four grayish
+buff eggs, spotted with black.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 6-3/4 inches; wing, 4-1/4, and bill
+5/8 of an inch.
+
+
+THE RING-NECKED PLOVER
+
+(AEgialitis semipalmata)
+
+The ring-neck plover is a fairly common visitor during the winter
+months. It is usually seen on the coast or on other sandy shores. It
+may be known by its partially webbed feet.
+
+=Color=--Forehead, chin and neck, white, with a faint streak of dull
+brown from the bill under the eye to the back of the neck; a band of
+dull, brownish gray on the breast; back and wings, ashy gray; under
+parts, white; bill, black with a spot of orange at the base. Three
+toes which are webbed for about half their length.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--Nests are made in the sand and contain from three to
+four dirty white eggs, spotted with brown. =Measurements=--Total
+length, 6-3/4 inches; wing, 4-3/4, and bill, 1/2 inch.
+
+
+WILSON'S PLOVER
+
+(AEgialitis wilsonia)
+
+While the Wilson plover is found to some extent on the southern
+Atlantic Coast, it may properly be said to be a Pacific species. Here
+it is seen on the beaches in large numbers, just beyond the reach of
+the surf, picking the insects and minute shellfish as they are washed
+on the sand, or flying in flocks just above the breakers.
+
+=Color=--Forehead and stripe over the eye, white; black stripe in
+front of crown; top of head and stripe from the eye to the bill,
+black; black band just below the throat; back, gray; under parts,
+white; bill black, and legs and feet, light pink.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is a mere depression in the ground, with
+three to four eggs of a pale olive, spotted with dark brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, 7 to 8 inches; wing, 4 to 5; bill, about
+3/4 of an inch. Three toes with a small
+
+[Note: Unfinished sentence in original printed version.]
+
+There are a number of other plovers on the hunting grounds of the
+Pacific Coast, but they are either too small or the flesh too poor to
+interest the sportsman. Of these the killdeer plover is the most
+common and the best known. A description of these would be of no
+interest to the sportsman and therefore add nothing to the purposes of
+this work.
+
+
+ [Illustration: AMERICAN AVOCET (Recurvirostra americana)]
+
+
+THE AVOCET
+
+(Recurvirostra americana)
+
+The family =Recurvirostridae= has but two representatives on the Coast.
+The American avocet breeds from Washington southward and spends its
+winters from central California south. They are quite plentiful in
+southern California during the winter months, increasing in numbers in
+Lower California and Mexico. Its webbed feet and long upward turned
+bill are features by which it may always be known. It is generally
+found in flocks and frequents both fresh and salt-waters.
+
+=Color=--Head and neck, ashy gray; back and under parts, white; the
+primaries and upper half of the secondaries, black, making the wing
+about half black; bill, very slender and curved upward; legs, very
+long and of a lead color; feet, webbed.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest contains three to four eggs of a pale olive,
+spotted with brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 19 inches; wing, 8, and bill,
+3-1/2 inches.
+
+
+THE BLACK-NECKED STILT
+
+(Himantopus mexicanus)
+
+The black-necked stilt is the other representative of the family. The
+stilt breeds as far north as eastern Oregon, but is little seen north
+of southern California in the winter. From there south it is
+plentiful. It may be easily known by the back of its head and neck,
+its back being black and the rest of the plumage nearly pure white.
+Its legs are a dark pink.
+
+=Color=--Wings, back, back of neck and top of head, black; balance of
+the plumage, white; legs, dark pink and very long. Toes, three and
+partly webbed.
+
+=Nest and Eggs=--The nest is rarely anything but bare ground on which
+is deposited three to four eggs of a pale brown, spotted with dark
+brown.
+
+=Measurements=--Total length, about 15-1/2 inches; wing, 9, and
+bill 2-3/4 inches.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, LIMICOLAE
+
+ Family, CHARADRIDAE - Plovers
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range and Breeding Grounds
+ -------------- -------------- ---------------- --------------------------
+
+ {squatarola Black-bellied {From Mexico north.
+ { plover {Breeds from Oregon
+ { . {north to Alaska.
+ Charadrius {
+ {dominicus Golden plover Only an occasional
+ migrant.
+
+ {From Alaska south to
+ {semipalmata Ring-necked {Lower California. Breeds
+ { plover {in its northern range.
+ {
+ { {From Central California
+ {nivosa Snowy plover {south to Lower California
+ AEgialitis { {and Mexico. Breeds
+ { {throughout its range.
+ {
+ {montana Mountain plover {Interior plains of
+ { {California and Arizona.
+ { {Breeds in the mountain
+ { {valleys.
+ {
+ {wilsonia Wilson's plover {From Oregon south to
+ {Mexico. Breeds
+ {throughout its range.
+
+
+ Order, LIMICOLAE
+
+ Family, RECURVIROSTRIDAE - Avocets and Stilts
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range and Breeding Grounds
+ -------------- -------------- ---------------- --------------------------
+
+ Recurvirostra americana Avocet { From Mexico north to
+ { California. Breeds from
+ { Eastern Oregon south.
+
+ Himantopus Mexicanus Black-necked { From Mexico to Southern
+ stilt { California. Breeds near
+ { the mountain lakes.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Morphology of Fishes]
+
+
+
+
+THE GAME FISHES OF THE PACIFIC COAST
+
+
+Like in that portion of this work devoted to the game birds, this also
+is written in popular language, avoiding, as far as possible, all
+technical words and phrases, with the intention of furnishing a plain
+description of the game fishes of the Coast which anyone, unlearned in
+the science of ichthyology, may understand, and by which be able to
+identify any of the fishes he may capture.
+
+With fishes, like with birds, there are certain parts that must be
+referred to in order to show wherein one species differs from
+another. Wherever these parts have a common English name, that name
+has been used. But as there are a few parts that can only be referred
+to by their scientific names, a diagram has been added showing the
+location of all parts referred to in the text.
+
+In scope it treats only of such varieties as rise to the fly or are
+caught by trolling with rod and reel, whether from the stream, lake,
+bay or ocean, and furnish sport to the angler who fishes for the
+exhilarating pleasure their capture affords.
+
+The Pacific Coast is rich in game fishes, not only in the varieties
+found in its lakes and streams, but as well in its bays and estuaries,
+while the broad ocean furnishes varieties whose size and fighting
+qualities are not surpassed, even if equaled, in any other part of the
+world. To place in the hands of the young angler, and others who may
+not have given the subject the necessary attention, a convenient
+handbook by the aid of which even the novice may readily recognize the
+species of fish he has landed, is the object of these pages.
+
+ * * * * * * *
+
+All of the salmon, the trout, the chars, the white-fish and the lake
+herring have been classed by the naturalist in one family and given
+the name, =Salmonidae=; but it is only with three genera of the
+subfamily, =Salmoninae= that we are concerned. These are the Pacific
+salmon (=Oncorhynchus=), the true trout (=Salmo=) and the Eastern
+trout and the dolly varden trout (=Salvelinus=). The Atlantic salmon
+belong to the genus Salmo, the same as the true trout, and have but
+one species (=Salmo salar=), which partake more of the habits of the
+trout than do their Pacific cousins.
+
+
+THE PACIFIC SALMON
+
+(Oncorhynchus)
+
+Notwithstanding the fact that the salmon is one of the most valuable
+of all the food fishes, but little is known of its habits after it
+leaves the stream in which it is hatched until it returns to spawn,
+supposed to be from three to four years afterward. Whether they remain
+near the mouths of the streams, or whether they migrate to distant
+feeding grounds are questions that have never been solved. All of the
+five species are caught with seins in Puget Sound in greater or less
+numbers all the year round. From the action of those that spawn in the
+Sacramento river it would seem that they migrate southward and far out
+to sea, for on their return to spawn they enter Monterey Bay only on
+its southern side, and following around it at no great distance from
+the shore, leave it at the northern headlands and skirt the shore
+northward until they reach the entrance to San Francisco Bay on their
+way up the Sacramento river. Where the young fish make their habitat
+from the time they drift down the stream in which they were spawned
+until they return again to spawn has never been determined. They spawn
+but once and die soon afterward. As I know that this last statement
+will be disputed by some, for reasons best known to themselves, I will
+quote from that excellent work by Evermann and Jordan, "American Food
+and Game Fishes." "We have carefully," say these gentlemen, "examined
+the spawning habits of both forms of the red fish and chinook salmon
+in the head waters of Salmon river, Idaho, during two entire seasons,
+from the time the fish arrived in July until the end of September, by
+which time all the fish had disappeared. A number of important
+questions were settled by these investigations. In the first place it
+was found that all of the fish arrived upon the spawning grounds in
+perfect physical condition, so far as external appearances indicated;
+no sores, bruises or other mutilations showing on any of more than
+4000 fish examined. During the spawning, however, the majority became
+more or less injured by rubbing against the gravel of the
+spawning-beds, or by fighting with one another. Soon after done
+spawning every one of them died, not only both forms of the red fish
+but the chinook salmon as well. The dying is not due to the injuries
+the fish received on the spawning-grounds; many were seen dying or
+dead which showed no external or other injuries whatever. The dying of
+the West Coast salmon is in no manner determined by distance from the
+sea. Observations made by us and others elsewhere show that the
+individuals of all species of the =Oncorhynchus= die after one
+spawning, whether the spawning-beds are remote from the sea or only a
+short distance from salt-water."
+
+The angler's concern, however, is not so much with the procreative
+habits of the salmon as it is with their behavior while feeding and
+after being hooked.
+
+Salmon are rarely caught by still fishing, but they will take the
+spoon or a sardine or other small fish impaled upon the hook. They
+take the bait generally with some hesitation, though at times they
+strike it with all the impetuosity of the trout. Then the singing reel
+calls for careful and immediate action on the part of the angler, for
+the ten to forty pound fish on his light tackle is going to put up a
+fight worthy of his skill. In his mad rush for liberty the gamy fish
+gradually rises to the surface, and when at last checked by the skill
+of the angler, he will often leap out of the water to a height of from
+four to eight feet, his beautiful sides scintillating in the rays of
+the sun, forming a picture to gladden the heart of the angler, for if
+he be a true sportsman he will fish with such tackle only as will give
+his adversary a fair chance in the fight and require the fullest
+exercise of his own knowledge and skill to bring his fish to gaff. The
+salmon is a strong fighter but his rushes do not last long for a fish
+of its size. For this reason much of the sport of salmon fishing is
+lost through the use of too heavy tackle. The writer landed one
+without difficulty weighing 33-1/2 pounds on a nine thread, Cuttyhunk
+line and a 5-1/2 foot steel rod weighing less than six ounces, and I
+believe that a fifty pound fish can be landed with the same tackle.
+Trolling with hand lines for salmon is practiced by some, but such is
+not angling. Hauling in an impaled fish hand over hand with a small
+cable is neither sport nor sportsmanlike.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CHINOOK SALMON (Oncorhynchus tschawytscha)]
+
+
+THE CHINOOK, OR KING SALMON
+
+(Oncorhynchus tschawytscha)
+
+This species has a multiplicity of names, being known in different
+localities as chinook, quinnat, king, Sacramento river and Columbia
+river salmon, besides half a dozen or more Indian names. Its
+distribution is the widest of any of the Pacific salmon, ranging on
+both sides of the ocean from the latitude of Monterey Bay to Behring
+Straits. The run begins on the Columbia river as early as the latter
+part of February, many of the fish going up its tributaries 1000 miles
+or more to spawn. Farther south the run becomes gradually later.
+
+The spawning season also varies with the locality, and ranges from the
+latter part of July to the middle of November. The date of spawning
+seems to be determined by the temperature of the water, for it is said
+that the salmon will not spawn, even if on the spawning grounds, until
+the water has fallen to a temperature of 54 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+The chinook salmon is the largest of the family, specimens having been
+taken in Alaska waters that have weighed 100 pounds, while 50 to 60
+pound fish are common. Those taken in the Columbia river are said to
+average 22 pounds, while the average of the Sacramento river catch is
+16.
+
+Head, rather pointed; eye, small and situated a little in front of the
+back of the mouth; body, rounded and full, the deepest part being
+about midway of its length; pectoral fins, short and situated low and
+just behind the gills; dorsal fin, nearly midway of the back; ventral
+fins, a little behind the center of the dorsal; anal fin about half
+way between the ventral and the tail; adipose fin, a little in front
+of the rear of the ventrals; caudal fin, or tail, slightly forked.
+
+The back, dorsal fin and tail are generally well covered with dark
+brownish black spots. There are few spots as a rule on the head, and
+those are of a slaty color.
+
+There is always some variation in color, but usually the back is quite
+dark, turning to bluish on the sides and light silver below. As the
+spawning season approaches, the jaws of the males become lengthened
+and badly distorted and the color changes to more of a pinkish hue and
+blotched in appearance. The gills are never alike on both sides,
+varying from 15 to 19 in number. (See plate giving names of all parts
+mentioned.)
+
+
+BLUEBACK, OR SOCK-EYE SALMON, REDFISH
+
+(Oncorhynchus nerka)
+
+This species is next in commercial value to the chinook. It has been
+taken occasionally in the Sacramento river but it is not common south
+of the Columbia river. The run of this species begins about the first
+of April and the fish go as far as Salmon river, Idaho, fully 1000
+miles from the sea to spawn. By a peculiar instinct this species only
+run up such rivers as have lakes at their heads, and spawn in the
+lakes or at the mouths of little streams emptying into them, in many
+of the lakes of Oregon and Washington are found the young of the
+blue-back salmon which are commonly called redfish. These fish never
+leave these lakes and therefore never attain a size of more than five
+to seven pounds.
+
+Head, short and pointed and light olive in color; under jaw, white;
+body, long, slim and rather flattened; back, blue; sides, silver;
+belly, dull white; dorsal fin, dark; others flesh color; tail, rather
+narrow and well forked; gills, 13 to 15. As the spawning season
+approaches the whole fish takes on a decided reddish cast, which
+sometimes becomes as dark as a brick-red. The jaw becomes very much
+hooked, and a few spots appear.
+
+
+THE SILVER SALMON
+
+(Oncorhynchus kisutch)
+
+In line of importance the silver salmon occupies the next place. It is
+also known by a number of names, among which are koho, skowitz and
+kisutch. It is a small fish, rarely exceeding 16 inches in length and
+never reaching more than ten pounds in weight. Its range is from
+Alaska south to Monterey Bay, where it has recently been planted and
+seems to flourish. It spawns in the smaller coast streams, never going
+far from the salt water. Its run begins about the first of September,
+spawning in October and November.
+
+Head, short with blunt snout; opercles or gill covers, very convex;
+body, shaped very much like the chinook; back, bluish green; sides,
+silver white. It has but few spots and these are confined pretty much
+to the head, upper fins and tail. Gills, 13 or 14.
+
+
+THE HUMP-BACK SALMON
+
+(Oncorhynchus gorbuscha)
+
+This is another small species, rarely exceeding six pounds in weight
+but more commonly from three to four. Its range is from the Sacramento
+river, where it appears in limited numbers, north to Alaska.
+
+Body, slim, scales very small; back, blue and sides silvery white.
+Profusely spotted on the after part of the back, with large oval spots
+on the tail. Gills, 11 to 13.
+
+
+THE DOG SALMON
+
+(Oncorhynchus keta)
+
+The dog salmon rarely exceeds ten pounds in weight. Its range is from
+the Sacramento river north, and its spawning-grounds the small streams
+up which it never extends any great distance from the salt water.
+
+Head, quite pike-like in shape and therefore much longer and slimmer
+than the chinook. Back, dirty brown, with the sides of much the same
+color, but of a lighter tint; fins, very dark; very few distinct
+spots, with those showing very small; gills, 13 or 14.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The Pacific salmon are only caught by trolling.
+They will take a spoon, or any live bait. The most successful lure,
+however, is a sardine, or other small fish of six to eight inches in
+length. Pass the hook through both eyes, take a half hitch around the
+head, insert the point of the hook in the gill and by bending the fish
+in the shape of the hook bring the point out about an inch and a half
+or two inches from the tail. This allows the fish to remain curved,
+and gives it a revolving motion while trolling, resembling a live,
+though disabled fish.
+
+A salmon rod should consist of a butt 14 to 16 inches in length, with
+a hand piece in front of the reel; tip, 6 feet long and not to weigh
+more than 7 ounces; line not to exceed standard 12-thread. With fishes
+weighing from 40 pounds and upward, 300 feet of line can be used to
+advantage.
+
+
+ [Illustration: RAINBOW TROUT (Salmo irideus)]
+
+
+THE RAINBOW TROUT
+
+(Salmo irideus)
+
+There are at least four distinct species of trout; that is, trout
+proper and chars, now common to the coast. One of these, the Eastern
+brook trout, is the result of artificial hatching and distribution.
+These, as well as the rainbow, and to lesser extent the cutthroat,
+have been so widely distributed by the state fish commission and
+private hatcheries that to attempt to give the present habitat of the
+several species would be sure to result in many errors which might be
+confounding. The Eastern brook trout has taken kindly to our waters
+and seem to be doing well in all suitable streams. Several other
+foreign species of trout have been introduced into our waters as well
+as these, among which are the Loch Leven, the German brown trout and
+the Mackinaw, but the success of their acclimatization has yet to be
+fully determined, though the Loch Leven and German brown seem to be
+doing well in the higher streams.
+
+The Eastern brook trout and the native species, known as dolly varden,
+are chars and belong to the genus =Salvelinus=, but the rainbow and
+the cutthroat are true trout belonging to the genus =Salmo=. The
+rainbow and the cutthroat present a variety of forms in different
+localities and these have been given separate specific names by the
+naturalist. With many of these species(?) the only difference seems to
+be too slight to entitle them to specific or even sub-specific
+separation; the variation being no more than that found in the color
+and markings of the same fishes in the same stream, caused by the
+depth of the water, the food, or other local conditions.
+
+The rainbow trout is now a resident, either through natural or
+artificial distribution, of nearly all the streams of the Coast from
+Washington to Lower California. They vary in size, color and number of
+scales in different localities and have been given distinct specific
+names in the various sections, those of the Coast streams of
+California being used as the typical form. These several varieties,
+even in their natural condition, showed very little, if any positive
+line of demarkation, but since the establishment of the many
+hatcheries on the Coast and the wide distribution of the fry hatched
+from the spawn of the rainbow of the Sacramento and its tributaries,
+of the steelhead of the Eel river, and of the typical form of the
+Coast streams, there seems but one course now left, and that is to
+group them all as one species under the original name of rainbow.
+
+The rainbow is a very handsome trout, varying in size from adults of
+but a few inches in the smaller Coast streams, to 25 and 30 inches
+long in the larger rivers and lakes. Its dark spotted back and silvery
+sides with the rich metallic colors of the rainbow streak gives it a
+coloration that is at once brilliant and pleasing. As a game fish it
+has no superior, if indeed an equal. It takes the fly with a rush,
+often leaping out of the water to seize it as it is descending. Then
+it fights with a determination, often breaking three or four feet into
+the air, shaking its head to free the hook like a terrier shakes a
+rat. It seldom sounds and never sulks. The rainbow trout goes to the
+sea at varying ages, the same as all other trout that can get there
+without passing through long stretches of warm and sluggish water. In
+the salt water it attains a greater size, changes its color in
+accordance with the length of time it has been there, but on returning
+again to the stream it soon assumes its original plan of coloring.
+
+Head, about one-fourth of the whole length from the snout to the base
+of the caudal fin, varying much with age and size. Generally the
+greatest depth is about one fourth of the length of the fish, but this
+also varies very much with the character of the waters it inhabits. In
+rapid running streams the fish are always slimmer than in more
+sluggish ones. I have known them 20 inches or more in length, when
+confined in large reservoirs, to become so heavy that they would weigh
+one pound to every two inches in length. The lateral line, or rainbow
+varies, in intensity of color, but always showing in varying shades of
+red, pink, and sometimes blue of a metallic luster. The vertical black
+blotches seen on the sides are the marks of immature fish.
+
+The snout of the rainbow is considerably more rounding than that of
+the salmon, and the head larger in proportion. The eye also is much
+larger and fuller. The shape and position of the fins are almost
+identical with those of the salmon, but a little larger in proportion
+to the size of the fish. The tail, however, varies considerably, being
+more rounded, and showing only a slight indentation in the center.
+
+
+THE GOLDEN TROUT
+
+(Salmo irideus agua bonita)
+
+If there is any variety of the rainbow trout found on the Coast that
+is entitled to a sub-specific name it is the golden trout of Mt.
+Whitney. They were originally found in only a short portion of two
+little streams fed by the snows of Mt. Whitney, and vary but little
+from each other. In one stream they have been given the name of =Salmo
+irideus agua bonita=, and in the other that of =Salmo irideus
+rooseveltii=, after ex-president Roosevelt. They are of a beautiful
+color with scarlet markings at the base of the fins and with a lateral
+stripe of bright scarlet blending into a rich orange. One peculiarity
+of these fish is that the par marks or vertical blotches on the sides
+of other young fish still show on the adults of these. This form of
+the rainbow has changed its color through the process of natural
+selection, caused no doubt, by the color of the rocks in the shallow
+streams it inhabits. Below on these same streams where the rocks are
+of a darker color the fish assume the natural color of the rainbow.
+
+The writer is possibly the first white man to ever catch one of the
+golden trout. They were taken in 1865 with a small piece of the flank of
+a deer skin slipped over the hook, with the hair clipped to about half
+an inch in length. No sooner was this improvised fly cast upon the water
+than it was eagerly seized by one of these beautiful fish. When it was
+landed the color astonished me, and knowing that it was a trout, I
+thought it must be a diseased one and threw it back. Making another cast
+I secured another one as promptly as the first, and it being the same
+objectionable color and of the same size--about eight inches--I
+concluded that it was the same fish and this time threw it on the bank.
+As fast as my deer skin fly would strike the water it would be eagerly
+seized by one of these game little fellows and all of the same size and
+color. I was puzzled and called to my companion, who was cooking our
+supper but a few yards away, to "come and see what was the matter with
+these fish." Professing some scientific knowledge, he cut one of them
+open, examined the meat and the intestines and finally pronounced it in
+a healthy condition, finishing with:
+
+"The coffee is boiling and the bacon is fried; hurry up, and as soon
+as you get a mess I'll fry them and take all chances."
+
+I soon had a mess for supper and while he was frying them I caught
+enough for breakfast, for the game little fellows would race for the
+fly as fast as it struck the water. We ate them with a relish, for we
+had had nothing but bacon, venison and frying-pan bread for a month.
+As we found ourselves alive in the morning we increased the
+prescription to a good alapathic dose for breakfast.
+
+The golden trout are small, rarely reaching a length of more than
+fifteen inches. The back is olive, sides and belly light orange or
+golden yellow with a scarlet stripe along the center of the belly and
+at the base of the pectoral, ventral and anal fins, which are of
+themselves more or less of a golden color. Tail, olive, grading into
+orange on the lower part. Few spots in front of the dorsal fin but
+abundant behind it.
+
+While the rainbow trout of the Coast have been given several
+sub-specific names, such as =masoni= for the Coast streams of Oregon
+and Washington, =shasta= and =stonei= for those of the upper
+Sacramento basin, and =gilberti= for those of Kern river, there seems
+to be so very little reason for this distinction beyond the usual
+variations of color in all trout, spots and size with the changing
+conditions of water and feed, that I shall make no mention of the very
+slight variations upon which the ichthyologist has based the claim to
+a sub-specific nomenclature.
+
+
+THE STEELHEAD TROUT
+
+(Salmo rivularis)
+
+The history of the so-called steelhead trout and the efforts to class
+these sea-run fishes as a species separate from the rainbow and the
+cutthroat, is interesting, if not amusing. No one questioned that they
+were other than the sea-run of the rainbow or the cutthroat, according
+to the locality, until Dr. Richardson, mistaking a young blue-back
+salmon for a so-called steelhead gave it the scientific name of =Salmo
+gairdneri=, and the description of this young salmon was recognized as
+that of the steelhead for years, and under this name it appears in
+the statutes of California, with a separate season for its protection.
+In other words the =Salmo gairdneri= of the laws of California is a
+young blue-back salmon and not a sea-run trout of any kind. Recently
+Dr. Ayers to correct the mistake, examined a fish taken from the
+Sacramento river and said to be a steelhead, gave it the name of
+=Salmo rivularis=, and this now stands as the scientific name of the
+so-called steelhead. Dr. Jordan, in an article recently published in
+the Pacific Monthly, says: "There has been much discussion as to
+whether the steelhead is a species really distinct from the rainbow
+trout, and on this subject the writer (Jordan) has at different times
+held different opinions."
+
+If one authority bases his reasons for a belief in a specific
+difference between the rainbow and the steelhead on the fact that he
+did find a difference between a blue-back salmon and a rainbow, and
+another authority finds so little difference that he holds different
+opinions at different times, can there be any wonder that the
+practical angler, who catches these sea-run fish at the mouths of our
+rivers in every stage of transition, or gradation, if you please, from
+the typical rainbow to the Simon pure steelhead, refuses to believe
+that there is a specific difference?
+
+Then again, Messrs. Jordan and Evermann in bulletin 47 of the United
+States National Museum, "The Fishes of North and Middle America," say:
+"In the lower course of the Columbia they (the steelhead) are entirely
+distinct from the cutthroat or clarki series, and no one would
+question the validity of the two species. In the lower Snake river and
+other waters east of the Cascade range, the two forms or species are
+indistinguishable, being either undifferentiated or else inextricably
+mixed."
+
+From this it would seem clear that the steelhead of the Columbia,
+where the cutthroat abounds, are cutthroats that have gone to the sea,
+grown larger in the larger body of water--a natural condition of all
+fishes--and changed in color and appearance. That while they are yet
+in the lower Columbia and only recently from the salt water, they
+still maintain a sufficient difference to be easily distinguished from
+the cutthroat; but by the time that they have reached the "Snake river
+and other waters east of the Cascade range," their long residence in
+the fresh water has again restored them to their former appearance.
+The same changes are found with the rainbow and the steelhead of
+farther south. All trout are anadromous to greater or less extent,
+unless actually landlocked or living in streams so distant from the
+sea that they would be compelled to pass through long stretches of
+warm and sluggish water to reach it. The small trout of the coast
+streams are compelled to go to the ocean quite early in the season by
+the falling of the water to such an extent that in many cases the
+streams go dry before the beginning of the winter rains, and in the
+larger body of water they rapidly increase in size. The steelhead of
+the Columbia river always retains the cutthroat sing-manual, to
+greater or less extent, while the steelhead of the lower coast has no
+red on the jaw. The claim that the smaller head of the steelhead is a
+distinguishing mark, fails in effect, for it is an undisputable fact
+that the older and larger the trout the smaller becomes the relative
+size of the head. The other claim that the larger scales of the
+rainbow is a distinguishing feature from the steelhead is not founded
+on facts. For while the scales of the rainbow counted along the
+lateral line vary from as low as 120 in the coast streams, they run as
+high as 150 in the same streams, as high as 160 in the McCloud and 185
+in the Kern. The average being 135 in the smaller coast streams, 150
+in the Sacramento basin, and 170 in the Kern. The steelhead's scales
+run from 130 to 155. An average of 145; or exactly an average of those
+of the coast streams and the Sacramento. Were it possible for the Kern
+river trout to enter the ocean no doubt we would find steelhead
+running as high as 185 to the section.
+
+Whatever may be the origin of the large sea-running trout called
+steelheads, the fact remains that it is a grand fish both in size and
+fighting qualities. In the ocean it eagerly takes the spoon and fights
+with a vigor not even surpassed by the rainbow of the streams. After a
+short sojourn in the fresh waters it rises to a fly just as readily.
+
+Since the above was written Dr. Jordan has made the statement
+publicly, that he is thoroughly convinced that the rainbow trout and
+the so-called steelhead are one and the same fish; the only difference
+being that the latter has grown larger and changed its color during
+its life in the salt water, this variation of color returning again
+after a short sojourn in the fresh water streams, giving it all the
+original appearance of the rainbow, or of the cutthroat, as the case
+may be.
+
+
+THE CUTTHROAT TROUT
+
+(Salmo clarki)
+
+The cutthroat trout very largely take the place of the rainbow in the
+waters of northern California and in Washington and Oregon, and its
+various forms are more common to the lakes. Like the rainbow they
+have been artificially distributed to such an extent that they are
+now found in many of the streams of California and nearly all of
+Washington and Oregon. As a general rule they are not as keen fighters
+as the rainbow, but in the cold streams of Oregon and Washington they
+put up a fight worthy of the most gamy fish. In the lakes of
+Washington and Oregon, and such as Tahoe, Donner and other large
+bodies of water in California, they reach a large size; fishes of ten
+and twelve pounds being not uncommon. When not landlocked they go to
+the sea the same as the rainbow and return as the steelhead of the
+Columbia and other northern streams. Like the rainbow the cutthroat
+has been divided into several subspecies.
+
+General appearance like that of the rainbow. The color on the back is
+a lighter olive or dark steel color. The upper parts are generally
+thickly covered with dark spots, varying in color and shape, and the
+lower fins are also spotted with smaller spots. The inner edge of the
+lower jaw is strongly marked with deep red and it is from this red
+mark on the throat that the species takes its name. The sides are
+generally of a marked pinkish hue or coppery brown. The red mark of
+the throat will always prove a distinguishing feature.
+
+
+SILVER TROUT
+
+(Salmo tahoensis)
+
+In Lake Tahoe there are two varieties of trout that have been given
+separate specific names. They both belong to the cutthroat series, but
+vary considerable from the typical form. The one commonly called silver
+trout is a resident of the deep waters of the lake and grows to a large
+size, specimens having been taken fully 30 inches long.
+
+Back, dark green; side and sides of head, coppery; lower jaw, yellow.
+The spots are so profuse that many of them run into each other and
+form long blotches in many instances. All of the fins are spotted,
+those on the dorsal and the tail being oblong in shape. The belly also
+is covered with many small spots.
+
+
+LAKE TAHOE TROUT
+
+(Salmo henshawi)
+
+The other variety of trout found in Lake Tahoe, and the most common
+one, is a very handsome fish. Its native habitat is the lakes of
+Tahoe, Donner, Independence, Webber, Pyramid and others of the high
+mountains, and the Truckee, Carson and Humboldt rivers. Specimens of
+this trout have been taken that weighed fully six pounds.
+
+Back, green, varying in depth of color with the water; sides, light,
+with a strong coppery tinge. The spots on this variety are generally
+quite large above, but growing smaller below and reaching well onto
+the belly. Its coppery sides and larger spots should prove a
+distinguishing feature. Like all the cutthroats it has the red
+markings below the jaws.
+
+
+LAKE SOUTHERLAND TROUT
+
+(Salmo jordani)
+
+Another peculiar variety of the cutthroat trout is found in Lake
+Southerland of Eastern Washington. Its distinguishing features are its
+orange-red fins and intensely black spots which are very profuse. It
+is a gamy fish and full of fight to the finish.
+
+In several of the lakes of Washington there are varieties of trout
+differing in coloration and location of their spots that have been
+given specific names by the naturalist, such as crescent trout,
+beardslee trout and bathaecetor trout, all residents of Crescent lake.
+But as they all belong to the cutthroats and vary each from the other
+but little, further mention is unnecessary.
+
+
+RIO GRANDE TROUT
+
+(Salmo spilurus)
+
+The Rio Grande trout, which is also a cutthroat, has a very limited
+distribution within the territorial scope of this work. It is found in
+the streams of the eastern slope of the Sierra Madre Mountains of
+Chihuahua, Mexico. Its head is shorter and more rounded than the other
+species of the cutthroat, with a mouth also very large. The spots are
+principally confined to the latter half of the body and most profuse on
+the tail.
+
+
+COLORADO RIVER TROUT
+
+(Salmo pleuriticus)
+
+The Colorado river trout, also a cutthroat, is the common trout of
+Arizona, where it is found in nearly all the mountain streams of the
+territory which flow to the Colorado river. It differs only from the
+typical cutthroat by having its spots mostly on that part of the body
+behind the dorsal fin; and the lower fins strongly marked with red.
+
+
+DOLLY VARDEN TROUT
+
+(Salvelinus parki)
+
+The dolly varden is the only char native to the Pacific Coast, and
+like the Eastern brook trout is not properly a trout. They both are
+chars and belong to the genus =Salvelinus=--not to the =Salmo=. The
+dolly varden often reaches a length of thirty to thirty-six inches,
+and a weight of twelve pounds. It is a more slender fish than the
+rainbow and not so rounded on the back. It is very largely a bottom
+feeder and, therefore, rather of a sluggish nature. It rises but
+little to the fly and makes a poor fight.
+
+Back, olive green but without the marble markings of the Eastern brook
+trout. Spots on the back and sides are red, not very close together
+and about the size of three-fourths of the diameter of the eye. The
+lower fins have a reddish tinge, of varying hue in different waters.
+It is a native of the McCloud river and has been little distributed.
+
+
+ [Illustration: EASTERN BROOK TROUT (Salvalinus fontinalis)]
+
+
+EASTERN BROOK TROUT
+
+(Salvelinus fontinalis)
+
+The Eastern brook trout--properly a char--was introduced into the
+coast waters several years ago and found our waters so congenial that
+it must now be considered a resident species, for it is to be met with
+in many of our streams, and thrives well in any of the higher
+localities. The brook trout is a handsome fish with its brown and
+olive marbled back, scarlet spots and salmon-colored sides. Its beauty
+has challenged the cunning of the painter, and been immortalized by
+the genius of the poet. Its gamy qualities stood for centuries as
+beyond comparison until the bended rod and singing reel announced the
+impalement of the native of the Golden West, with its mad rushes and
+terrier-like fights; then the rosy beauty of the East had to yield the
+palm to the rainbow-colored, fighting pirate of the Pacific.
+
+The brook trout may easily be distinguished from any of the other
+trout of the coast by its marbled back and red spotted sides. Besides
+this the whole fish is more of a pinkish color. It varies in size like
+the others of the family, according to the waters it inhabits,
+attaining about the same size as the rainbow in the same waters.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--On account of over fishing the streams, and the
+very bad habit of killing so many small fish, the majority of the
+trout caught on the Pacific Coast are small. If there were more
+sportsmen and less fishermen on our streams this condition would not
+exist. For the sportsman will throw back all the little babies that
+are not over six inches in length and allow them another year to grow.
+And in this connection I want to say to the young boys and girls: be
+true sportsmen and sportswomen and never fish for trout with anything
+but artificial flies. You may not catch as many fish while you are
+learning, but you will soon find that you are having ten times more
+sport. As to the rod and line, you will never get it too light. The
+longer you have been a flycaster, the lighter you will want them; and
+the lighter they are the more sport you will have.
+
+
+
+
+ THE SALMON AND TROUT
+
+ Order, ISOSPONDYLI
+
+ Family, SALMONIDAE Subfamily, SALMONINAE
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range and Breeding Grounds
+ ------------- ------------- ----------------- ---------------------------
+ {Quinant
+ {tschawytscha {Chinook {From Monterey Bay north.
+ {
+ { {Blue-back
+ Oncorhynchus {nerka {Redfish {Sacramento river north.
+ {
+ {kisutch {Silver salmon From Monterey Bay north.
+ {keta {Dog salmon From Sacramento river
+ { { north.
+ {gorbuscha {Hump-back salmon From Sacramento river
+ { { north.
+
+ {irideus {Rainbow trout From Lower California
+ { { north.
+ {
+ {irideus auga Golden trout Western slope of
+ {bonito Mt. Whitney.
+ {
+ {irideus Golden trout Western slope of
+ {rooseveltii Mt. Whitney.
+ {
+ {rivularis Steel-head trout From Ventura river
+ { north.
+ {
+ Salmo {clarki Cutthroat trout Central California
+ { north.
+ {
+ {tahoensis Silver trout Lake Tahoe.
+ {
+ {henshawi Tahoe trout {Lakes Tahoe, Donner,
+ { {Independence, Webber;
+ { {Truckee and Carson
+ { {rivers.
+ {
+ {jordani Lake Southerland Lake Southerland,
+ { Oregon.
+ {
+ {spilurus Rio Grande trout Tributaries of the
+ { Rio Grande river.
+ {
+ {plueriticus Colorado trout Tributaries of the
+ { Colorado river.
+
+ {parki Dolly Varden McCloud river north.
+ Salvelinus { trout
+ {
+ {fontinalis Eastern brook {Acclimatized in
+ { trout {many streams of
+ { {the coast.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SMALL-MOUTHED BLACK BASS (Micropterus dolomieu)]
+
+
+SMALL-MOUTHED BLACK BASS
+
+(Micropterus dolomieu)
+
+The black bass is not a native of the coast, but both species are now
+so well established in our waters that they must now be classed as
+permanent residents, for whether it is the crystal lake, the flowing
+stream, the little pond, the artesian-fed reservoir or the brackish
+slough, they thrive equally well and take any lure from the artificial
+fly to the plebeian angleworm.
+
+Black bass are prolific breeders and rapid growers. A case is on
+record where eight males and seven females were planted in a pond in
+May and during the November following over 37,000 young fish were
+taken from the same pond, each from three to four inches long.
+
+The black bass is a short, deep fish with a double dorsal fin; the
+front half being stiff and spiney and the latter half soft and rayed.
+The color is variable, but always dark and from a dirty green to a
+blackish brown on the back, shading to a dirty white on the belly. The
+gill covers are pointed at the back, with a darker spot on the point.
+In the small-mouthed variety the end of the upper bone of the mouth
+does not quite reach to the back edge of the eye, this with the scales
+on the cheek numbering from 16 to 18, can always be relied upon as a
+distinguishing diagnosis from the large-mouthed variety.
+
+
+LARGE-MOUTHED BLACK BASS
+
+(Micropterus salmoides)
+
+There is but little difference in the habits of the large and
+small-mouthed black bass, and but little difference in their
+appearance, but the distinguishing features may easily be known. The
+end of the upper bone of the mouth of the large-mouthed variety
+extends behind the eye, and the rows of scales on the cheek number
+only 10 or 12.
+
+While both species seem to do well any place, the large-mouthed are
+better adapted to muddy bottomed ponds and sloughs and brackish
+waters. The average weight of the adults of either species is about
+three pounds, though individuals are often taken weighing from six to
+seven. It is reported that specimens have been taken in the state of
+California that have weighed eight and three-quarters and nine pounds.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The black bass will take any lure from the
+artificial fly to the plebeian angleworm. In trolling, a medium sized,
+Kewell spoon is to be preferred. I have always found, however, that
+the best sport is to be had by casting with a large trout fly--the
+color varying with the season--close to the edge of lily pads or
+tules. The tackle for fly-fishing should be the same as for trout.
+For trolling the rod should be shorter and stiffer.
+
+
+SACRAMENTO PIKE
+
+(Ptychocheilus oregonensis)
+
+The Sacramento pike, known also by the names chappaul and squawfish,
+and as lake trout in the San Joaquin Valley, while but little sought
+after by the angler, can rightfully be classed as a game fish, for it
+rises to the fly as readily as a trout and often gets cursed for doing
+so. It is a very common fish in many of the lakes and streams from
+Washington south to the San Joaquin Valley. Like nearly all fish its
+size depends very much upon the waters in which it is found. In
+Washington it has been known to reach a length of four feet, but it is
+more commonly met with from eight to twenty inches. In shape it
+resembles a trout, but with a slimmer and more pointed head. The
+dorsal fin is large and located about midway between the snout and the
+end of the tail; ventral fins, slightly in front of the dorsal and not
+as large as the anal which is set about its length from the ventrals;
+tail, strongly forked.
+
+
+ [Illustration: STRIPED BASS (Roccus lineatus)]
+
+
+STRIPED BASS
+
+(Roccus lineatus)
+
+The striped bass, like many people who have crossed the continent to
+California, readily appreciated the many advantages of a life on the
+Pacific Coast. From a couple of shipments brought from the East in
+1879 and 1882 they have grown to be one of the most important food
+fishes of the state, about 3,000,000 pounds being annually marketed.
+They were at first liberated in the Bay of San Francisco, but later
+some effort has been made to distribute them, with the result that
+they are now found in small quantities along the coast from Los
+Angeles to Humboldt.
+
+From their fine size--three to forty pounds--they stand well with the
+angler as a game fish and furnish good sport if the tackle is light
+enough. Their rushes are not equal to those of the steelhead or the
+salmon or the yellow-tail, nor do they fight with the same vigor or
+with the same persistency.
+
+The striped bass is unlike any other coast fish. Its back is light
+olive; sides, nearly white with seven or eight longitudinal stripes
+running the whole length of the body, the dorsal fin is double, but
+not joined like that of the black bass. The first half is spiny with
+the after division rayed and soft. It is a salt water fish, making its
+habitat in and near the mouths of rivers, and often running up them
+for 100 miles or more. Use the same rod and line as for salmon.
+
+
+
+
+THE GAME FISH OF THE SEA
+
+
+There certainly is no better sport to be had any place with the trout,
+salmon and bass than that furnished by the rivers, lakes and bays of
+the Pacific Coast. To this excellent sport must be added another of
+the most exciting character, and one distinctly Californian, and that
+is the capture with rod and reel of the large sea fishes found in the
+waters of the Santa Barbara Channel, and more especially of Catalina
+Island. The great variety, gamy qualities and massive size of these
+fishes furnish a sport at once exciting and exhilarating, and
+challenging the keenest exercise of the ability of the sportsman.
+
+The world-wide fame of these waters, and the grand sport they furnish
+have resulted in the establishment on Catalina Island of one of the
+finest, if not the most perfect and best equipped angler's resort in
+the world, from its launches and boatmen to its clubhouses and hotels,
+and made it the Mecca of the expert anglers of the civilized nations
+of the earth.
+
+
+ [Illustration: LEAPING TUNA (Thunnus thynnus)]
+
+
+THE TUNA
+
+(Thunnus thynnus)
+
+The leaping tuna is the largest of the great game fishes of the
+Pacific. It ranges from Monterey Bay, where it is sparingly met with,
+south to Mexico. About Catalina Island they are found in great numbers
+and of great size. The excellent sport their capture with rod and reel
+furnishes, has drawn to the island the expert anglers of the world,
+and resulted in the formation of the now famous "Tuna Club of
+Catalina," with its members residing in all parts of the world; and of
+which no one can become a member until he has landed a tuna of 100
+pounds or more with rod and reel and with a line not larger than a
+24-thread Cuttyhunk.
+
+Professor Charles F. Holder, an expert angler with a national
+reputation, and who has angled for all fishes and in all waters, says,
+"The most sensational fish of these waters is the leaping tuna. It is
+the tiger of the California seas, a living meteor, which strikes like
+a whirlwind, and played with a rod that is not a billiard cue or a
+club in stiffness, will give the average man the contest of his life."
+
+The record for the largest tuna caught with a rod and reel is held at
+this writing by Col. C. P. Morehouse of Pasadena, who brought to gaff
+a 251 pound tuna after a six-and-a-half-hours' fight, during which it
+had towed his boat over ten miles. But even a greater fight than this
+is recorded, but the fish was not landed. This fish fought for
+seventeen hours and thirty minutes before its wonderful endurance and
+splendid courage mastered the skill of the angler. Mr. C. B. Stockton
+has to his credit a fight which not only shows the great endurance of
+this angler but the remarkable vitality of these fish. This fight
+lasted for sixteen hours and fifty-five minutes before the fish was
+brought to gaff. It weighed 170 pounds and was taken on the regulation
+tackle.
+
+Body, round and sloping rapidly from the middle to the caudal fin, and
+very small and round at the base of the tail; tail divided into two
+long forks; two dorsal fins, the first beginning just behind the
+gill-covers with the pectoral and ventral fins a trifle farther back;
+second dorsal fin smaller than the first and located nearly half way
+between it and the caudal; anal fin midway between the ventral and the
+caudal; bony, saw-like projections from the second dorsal fin, and
+from the anal fin to the tail; color, blue on the back and silvery
+white on the sides.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The flyingfish is about the only bait with which
+the tuna can be caught. The hook, which must be attached to about 3-1/2
+or 4 inches or light chain and with a wire snell, is passed into the
+mouth and down the belly of the flyingfish, the barb projecting about
+midway of the fish. A small string is passed through the nose and
+under lip and tied through a link of the chain to keep the mouth shut.
+The speed of the boat should be from two to four miles an hour. In the
+middle of the day, when the tunas are feeding in schools, the sinker
+should be removed, and the lure skipped along the surface of the
+water. This effect can be helped by the motion of the rod.
+
+The Catalina Tuna Club has adopted the following tackle
+specifications:
+
+ For Tuna and Swordfish--Rod to be of wood, consisting of a
+ butt and tip, and to be not shorter than 6 feet, 9 inches
+ over all. Tip not less than 5 feet in length, and to weigh
+ not more than 16 ounces. Line not to exceed standard
+ 24-thread.
+
+
+ [Illustration: ALBACORE (Germo alalunga)]
+
+
+THE ALBACORE
+
+(Germo alalunga)
+
+The albacore is another genus of the same family, and reaches a weight
+of 40 to 80 pounds; averaging 25 pounds. It is seldom seen as far
+north as San Francisco, but is abundant from Santa Barbara south to
+Central America. Like all of the family it is a gamy fish, and affords
+good sport to the angler. In general shape and appearance it resembles
+the tuna, but will always be distinguished by its long, sword-like
+pectoral fins that start from near the gills, and a trifle lower than
+the eye, and reach beyond the second dorsal fin.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The albacore will take almost any lure from a
+sardine to a white rag. The speed of the boat can also be varied very
+much. I have known them to be caught on a hand line trolled behind a
+coast steamer. About three miles an hour, however, will give the best
+results. The following light tackle specifications of the Tuna Club
+will be found quite satisfactory for the average albacore:
+
+ Rod to be of wood, consisting of a butt and tip, and to be
+ not shorter than 6 feet, over all. Butt to be not over 14
+ inches in length. Tip not less than 5 feet in length, and to
+ weigh not more than 6 ounces. Line not to exceed standard
+ 9-thread.
+
+
+THE YELLOW-FIN ALBACORE
+
+(Germo microptera)
+
+Another of the =Scrombridae= family, and very closely allied to the
+albacore, is the yellow-fin albacore. This fish has erroneously been
+called "yellow-fin tuna." It does not belong to the genus =Thunnus=
+any more than does the albacore or the bonito. It is only a visitor to
+the California waters, and often does not make its appearance for one
+or two seasons at a time. They are common to the coasts of Japan and
+the Hawaiian Islands, and are supposed to migrate with the Japanese
+current. This species fights altogether on the surface, but lacks the
+sterling gamy qualities of the tuna.
+
+In shape it is built very much on the lines of the albacore, but with
+its pectoral fins only extending back to about half way between the
+anal and ventral, the other fins are placed the same as the albacore,
+and all except the pectoral strongly tinged with bright lemon;
+pectoral fin is more of a bright brown; eye, large and prominent.
+
+A few have been taken weighing as much as 40 pounds and one even 65
+pounds. The average, however, is about 30 pounds.
+
+
+ [Illustration: BONITO (Sarda chilensis)]
+
+
+THE BONITO, OR SKIPJACK
+
+(Sarda chilensis)
+
+To the angler who is not looking for the largest of game, the
+bonito--known as skipjack to the Catalina anglers--is possibly the
+most interesting of the ocean game fishes. Its beautiful metallic
+colors, its rapid movements, and pleasing habit of always fighting on
+the surface, and rarely, if ever sulking, makes it a most attractive
+game to the discriminating angler.
+
+The bonito also belongs to the =Scrombidae= family, and ranges from
+Point Conception to Mexico and south through the tropics.
+
+Body, rounded, tapering rapidly to the tail, which is strongly forked,
+but not so much as the albacore; pectoral fins, short and placed
+opposite the eye; dorsal fin, double, with saw-like ridges from the
+second dorsal and the anal fins to the tail, the same as in all of
+this family. Color, dark blue on the back, with a metallic luster;
+sides, silvery white, with dark longitudinal lines. Weight, from six
+to twelve pounds.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The light tackle specifications of the Tuna Club,
+given for albacore cannot be improved upon for these fish.
+
+
+ [Illustration: SPANISH MACKEREL (Scomberomorus concolor)]
+
+
+SPANISH MACKEREL
+
+(Scomberomorus concolor)
+
+This is another of the =Scrombidae= family. It ranges north to Monterey
+Bay, where it makes its appearance in September, remaining until
+November, when it goes south to the Santa Barbara channel; remaining
+in these waters and about Catalina Island during most of the winter.
+This fish is called bonito by many of the Catalina anglers, which is a
+misnomer, as it is a much slimmer fish than the bonito.
+
+The pectoral fins are small and located a little above the center of
+the body and close to the gill covers; front dorsal starts just above
+the base of the pectorals and extend along the back for a distance a
+little more than the length of the head, and nearly meeting the second
+dorsal, which is about the same width as its heighth; ventral fins, a
+little in front of the pectorals and rather small; front of the anal
+fin under the back of the second dorsal. Back, steel blue; sides,
+silvery. Oblique lines, of the darker color of the back, running
+forward and downward to a little below the lateral line.
+
+Weight, usually from nine to twelve pounds, though they occasionally
+attain a weight of eighteen pounds.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The same as for the bonito.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CHUB MACKEREL OR GREEN-BACK (Scomber japonicus)]
+
+
+THE CHUB MACKEREL
+
+(Scomber japonicus)
+
+The chub mackerel, the smallest of the =Scombridae= family, approaches
+very closely the true mackerel of the East. It is hard to find a fish
+of any variety more delicious than a chub mackerel, caught from the
+yacht and placed on the broiler as soon as it quits flapping. They are
+occasionally found as far north as Monterey bay, but their real range
+is from the Santa Barbara channel south. With reasonably light trout
+tackle they put up a gamy and interesting fight.
+
+Back, bluish green, mottled with irregular darker streaks, some of
+which pass below the lateral line; first dorsal fin quite high, and
+about the distance of its height in front of the second dorsal; second
+dorsal and anal about the same size and nearly opposite each other;
+tail forked, but not so broadly as the bonito. Weight, from one-half
+to three pounds.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--Trout tackle and spoon will furnish interesting
+sport. But they will take any lure.
+
+
+ [Illustration: YELLOW-TAIL (Seriola dorsalis)]
+
+
+THE YELLOW-TAIL
+
+(Seriola dorsalis)
+
+The yellow-tail belongs to the family =Carangidae=, the same to which
+belong the pompanos, and is one of the gamiest of sea fishes. In fact,
+it is generally said by experts who have fished for all varieties and
+in all waters, both salt and fresh, that the yellow-tail of Catalina
+is the gamiest fish, pound for pound, that swims. Whether this be true
+or not, it is certainly one of the hardest and most persistent
+fighters found anywhere and furnishes the angler with rod and reel
+from an hour to two hours of lively sport before he can bring it to
+gaff. One well-known writer on angling subjects says: "It never knows
+when it is dead." While the average catch will run from ten to thirty
+pounds, specimens have been taken weighing sixty-five pounds. It is
+occasionally met with in Monterey bay, but its range is from the Santa
+Barbara channel south, where it is caught the larger portion of the
+year.
+
+Grayish blue on the back; sides, a dull silver, with a yellowish buff
+stripe along the lateral line; fins, green, with a strong yellowish
+tinge; tail, yellowish buff. Scales small, with the head bare, except
+a small patch on the cheeks. Pectoral fin on a level with the eye and
+small; ventral under the center of the pectoral; caudal, slim and
+forked. The dorsal fin is double, the front being very small with
+spines and the second half more than twice as high; dorsal and anal
+fins continue in a low membrane to very near the tail. Body,
+elliptical and very small at the base of the caudal fin.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--Same as for salmon or albacore.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, ACANTHROPTERI.
+
+ Family, SCROMBIDAE
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range
+ ------------- ------------- ----------------- --------------------------
+
+ Thunnus thynnus Leaping tuna {From Coronado Islands
+ {to Monterey Bay.
+
+ {microptera Yellow-fin {Irregular visitors to the
+ { albacore {waters of Catalina Island
+ Germo { {and adjacent mainland.
+ {
+ {alalunga Albacore From Point Conception
+ south.
+
+ Sarda chilensis Bonito From Santa Barbara south.
+
+ Scomberomorus concolor Spanish mackerel From Monterey Bay south.
+
+ Scomber japonicus Chub mackerel From Point Conception
+ south.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CALIFORNIA SWORDFISH (Tetrapturus mitsukuri)]
+
+
+THE CALIFORNIA SWORDFISH
+
+(Tetrapturus mitsukuri)
+
+By many anglers for large and exciting game, the California swordfish
+is pronounced the king of all game fishes. Certainly they put up a
+very determined and exciting fight. In size they average about 180
+pounds, though one has been taken at Catalina by W. C. Boschen that
+weighed 355 pounds. When a swordfish is hooked its rushes are
+desperate, even reckless, and at times dangerous to the angler. In its
+determined efforts to free itself from the impaling hook, it threshes
+the waters into foam, repeatedly leaping into the air, where the
+sunlight scintillating upon the purple of its back and silvery sides
+adds the charm of color to the excitement of the contest. It is safe
+to say that there is no fish, either in the salt or fresh waters, that
+is so constantly on the surface and in the air during its struggles
+for freedom as is the California swordfish. Thirty, forty and even
+fifty clean leaps into the sunlight by the one fish have been recorded
+in its desperate struggle to baffle the skill of the angler.
+
+The snout of the swordfish is continued into a long, sharp bone, which
+measured from the back of the mouth is about one-fourth of the length
+of the fish from the mouth to the base of the tail. The under jaw is
+also a sharp projecting bone about half the length of the sword. The
+dorsal fin rises sharply from the top of the head to a height nearly
+equaling the depth of the body, the latter part curving downward and
+continuing along the back to nearly the center of the body; tail
+divided into two long, slim forks; second dorsal and anal near the
+tail and nearly opposite each other; ventral fin below the terminal of
+the first dorsal; pectoral fins rather long and located close to the
+gill-covers; two long, slender feelers projecting from the center of
+the throat just below the base of the pectorals; eye very large and
+bright dark blue.
+
+Purplish green on the back, with blue perpendicular stripes fading
+into the silvery sides; fins, dark purple.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--Same as for tuna.
+
+
+THE BLACK SEA BASS, OR JEW-FISH
+
+(Stereolepis gigas)
+
+This monster of the ocean, commonly called jew-fish, seems to be in
+all respects a gigantic black bass, closely resembling the
+small-mouthed of the fresh waters, and no further description will be
+necessary for anyone who may be fortunate enough to land one to know
+to what species it belongs. In fact, he will know just what he has
+hooked long before the monster shows himself on the top of the water.
+This huge black sea bass seems to have a very restricted range, for it
+is only known from the Coronado Islands to the Farallones. They are
+very plentiful around Catalina Island, where they are usually taken
+with hand lines. They can not be called a game fish, though they are
+now being taken with rod and reel at Catalina and furnish a kind of
+"heavy-weight" sport for those who like it. One weighing over 436
+pounds has been taken on a tuna rod and twenty-one thread line. The
+writer saw one several years ago that was taken on a hand line that
+weighed 720 pounds and was over seven feet in length. They are fish of
+great strength and will tow a boat with ease at a considerable speed.
+
+=Tackle=--The same as for tuna, with fish bait.
+
+
+THE BARACUDA
+
+(Sphyraena argentea)
+
+The baracuda is a common fish from San Francisco south to Mexico. In
+the Santa Barbara channel and about Catalina and San Diego it is
+largely taken by trolling with light tackle, when it affords really
+good sport. It is a long, slim fish, reaching three and even three and
+a half feet in length, the usual catch being from two to two and a
+half feet in length.
+
+Head long and slender; eye high up on the head and nearly half way
+between the snout and the back of the gill covers. Pectoral fin just
+below the lateral line; first dorsal spinous and nearly opposite the
+ventral; second dorsal about midway between the first and the tail;
+anal almost directly under the second dorsal.
+
+Bluish brown on the back, grading into white on the belly.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--Same as for bonito.
+
+
+
+
+WHITING and CROAKERS
+
+
+There are three other species of fish which inhabit the surf of the
+Pacific from Point Conception, south to Mexico, that, while they can
+not be properly termed game fishes, furnish the angler fine sport
+because of the gamy fight they make on light tackle. These are the
+whiting (=Menticirrhus undulatus=), the spot-fin croaker (=Roncador
+stearnsi=) and the yellow-fin croaker (=Umbrina roncador=). The first
+of these is known locally by the names of corbina and surf-fish,
+which are bad misnomers. The name, surf-fish, is given by the
+ichthyologist to a species of perch, and the courbina belongs to the
+genus =Pogonias= and is not found as far north as the California
+coast. These names should be abandoned by the anglers and the proper
+English name of whiting used. The word courbina is Italian and means
+croaker, from the Latin, corvus, crow.
+
+
+ [Illustration: WHITE SEA BASS (Cygonoscion nobilis)]
+
+
+THE WHITE SEA BASS
+
+(Cygonoscion nobilis)
+
+The white sea bass is purely a California species, ranging from the
+Coronado Islands to about the latitude of San Francisco. They are
+caught trolling and make a gamy fight on rod and reel. Twenty to forty
+pound fish are common and they have been caught weighing seventy-five
+pounds.
+
+Light bluish on the back and white on the sides, with many small
+specks; dark spot at the base of the pectoral fins. Head, long, with
+pointed snout, and with the scales of the head running nearly to its
+end. Dorsal fin double, the first half having ten spines and the
+latter twenty-one or twenty-two soft rays. Anal with two spines and
+nine rays. Tail but little forked.
+
+=Tackle=--The same as for salmon or yellow-tail.
+
+
+ [Illustration: CALIFORNIA WHITING OR SAND SUCKER
+ (Menticirrhus undulatus)]
+
+
+CALIFORNIA WHITING OR SAND-SUCKER
+
+(Menticirrhus undulatus)
+
+This species is common to the sand beaches of the Pacific, from Point
+Conception south to Guaymas, Mexico. It feeds during the larger part
+of the year in the surf, and is caught from the wharfs or by long
+casts with heavy sinkers from the beach. The whiting appears on the
+California coast in two varieties, the =undulatus= proper and a
+subspecies which I think has never been classified. At any rate, the
+difference seems sufficient to entitle it to a subspecifies
+classification, for the mouth curves strongly downward, and,
+therefore, does not extend so far back as the undulatus proper. The
+tail also differs, in having both upper and lower lobes rounded,
+instead of the upper being square as in the =undulatus=.
+
+Head, about one-fifth of the entire length; snout, rather pointed, and
+projecting beyond the mouth; mouth reaching to the center of the eye;
+small barbel on the lower lip. Dorsal fin, double, the first with from
+seven to nine spines, the second soft and reaching from the first to
+within about the length of the head from the tail; pectoral fins near
+the gills and about the width of the eye below the center of the body;
+ventral fins, a little behind the pectoral; anal fin under the center
+of the second dorsal; dorsal fins dark; pectoral, ventral and anal
+fins, light with darker tips; tail of the =undulatus= proper, upper
+lobe square and lower lobe rounded. Back, bluish brown, shading to
+white on the belly; scales, small. Below the lateral line are a number
+of small spots forming irregular lines running backward and upward.
+Size, rarely exceeding eight pounds.
+
+The illustration is of the variety that I have referred to as a
+subspecies.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--The three-six tackle. Rod to be of wood, consisting
+of a butt and tip, and to be not shorter than six feet over all;
+weight of entire rod not to exceed six ounces; butt not to be over
+twelve inches in length. Line not to exceed standard 6-thread. Lure,
+sandflies, mussels or clams.
+
+
+ [Illustration: YELLOW-FIN CROAKER (Umbrina roncador)]
+
+
+YELLOW-FIN CROKER
+
+(Umbrina roncador)
+
+The yellow-fin croaker is found in the surf or near it along the sandy
+beaches from some distance north of Point Conception south to
+Manzanillo, Mexico, where it is known by the name "corvina con aletas
+amarillas," or "croaker with yellow fins."
+
+Head, about one-fifth the whole length; snout, very blunt, with a
+small barbel on the lower lip. Dorsal fin double, the first half with
+seven or eight spines, the longest about two-thirds the length of the
+head; second half rayed and about two-thirds the height of the first,
+and reaching to about half the length of the head from the tail;
+pectoral fins short, and placed close to the gills and a little below
+the center of the body; ventral fins just below the pectoral and a
+trifle longer; anal fin, below the center of the second dorsal; tail,
+nearly square. Back, greenish brown, with a metallic luster and giving
+a pinkish tinge in some lights; sides, shading to white on the belly.
+A few irregular spots on the sides forming faint lines.
+
+
+SPOT-FIN CROAKER
+
+(Roncador stearnsi)
+
+The spot-fin croaker appears in and near the surf of the Pacific Coast
+from Point Conception south to Mexico. =Roncador= is Spanish and
+signifies snorer. This species resembles the yellow-fin very closely,
+but is usually lighter in color and more metallic in appearance. It
+can always be distinguished from the yellow-fin by the distinct black
+spots at the base of the pectoral fins.
+
+=Tackle and Lure=--Same as for whiting.
+
+
+
+
+THE TUNA CLUB OF CATALINA ISLAND
+
+
+I cannot close these articles on fish and fishing without a few words
+of commendation of the Tuna Club of Catalina Island. From the very
+inception of this organization it has striven to encourage the use of
+light tackle by all anglers. To this end, it has adopted three classes
+of tackle specifications for the taking of the several kinds of fish
+found in the waters surrounding its island home, and provided a number
+of cups and buttons to be awarded each year to anglers who land fishes
+of certain weights, with such tackle as is prescribed therefore by its
+rules. This campaign, which it has so energetically urged in behalf of
+scientific angling, has worked wonders in its section of the Coast.
+The old methods of landing fish, even of the gamiest quality, by the
+employment of nothing more than brute force at the end of an
+unbreakable cable, has almost disappeared in its section, and
+scientific angling with the lightest possible tackle has taken its
+place. But the good work of the Tuna Club has not been confined to the
+boundaries of its own section. Anglers from other sections of the
+country visiting Catalina, and seeing the additional pleasure derived
+from the use of light tackle, have become enthusiastic advocates of
+this more scientific means, and returning to their homes have spread
+the propaganda there.
+
+To the stiff pole and chalk-line fishermen of confirmed habits I have
+nothing to say. But to the younger generation who have not yet grown
+grey in the practice of bad habits, I wish to urge upon them the use
+of the lightest tackle possible, as a means of developing greater
+skill and deriving greater pleasure from their favorite sport. And
+this is equally true whether it be a tuna or a trout.
+
+
+
+
+ Order, ACANTHROPTERI
+
+ Family, SCIAENIDAE
+
+ Genus Species Common Names Range
+ ------------ ---------- ------------------- --------------------------
+ {California whiting {From Point Conception
+ Menticirrhus undulatus {or sand sucker {south to Guaymas, Mexico.
+
+ {From Point Conception
+ Roncador stearnsi Spot-fin croaker {south to Manzanillo,
+ {Mexico.
+
+ {From Point Conception
+ Umbrina roncador Yellow-fin croaker {south to Manzanillo,
+ {Mexico.
+
+ {From San Francisco south
+ Cygonoscion nobilis White sea bass {to Coronado Islands.
+
+
+
+
+ATTRACTIVE FISHING RESORTS
+
+
+It is possible that the day may come when man will be so engrossed
+with the pursuit of the dollar that the call of the wild will no
+longer quicken the pulsations of his heart. But until that time does
+come, the wild creatures of nature, whose pursuit affords the most
+healthful and exhilarating pastime, will continue to lure him to their
+haunts.
+
+ "To sit on rocks and gaze o'er flood and fell;
+ To slowly trace the forest's shady scene,
+ Where things that own not man's dominion dwell,
+ And mortal feet hath ne'er, or rarely, been,"
+
+will long continue to present a charm to all who love the sublimity of
+the mountains, the beauty of the flower-decked fields, or the
+awe-inspiring grandeur of the ocean.
+
+To draw a bead on the antlered buck; to stop the flight of the gamy
+quail; to land the denizen of the mountain stream, or troll the
+ocean's depth for the tuna, the salmon or the yellow-tail, furnishes a
+pastime whose recollection draws one back again and again to sit on
+nature's lap and listen to her teachings. The recollection of these
+pleasures are locked in the treasure vaults of the memory, where the
+wearings of time can never erase them; for when the once firm step
+that carried him proudly up the mountain's side shall falter and
+become a palsied wreck of time, and the eye, dimmed by the accumulated
+mists of years, shall see clearly, only in retrospect, he will sit by
+his fire-side in slippered feet, and, gazing down the long vistas of
+the past, live over and over again in his reveries the pleasures
+furnished by the forest, the field, the stream and the ocean.
+
+Nothing would please me better than to describe herein the many places
+where, during a residence on the Pacific Coast of more than half a
+century, I have enjoyed these sports in the fullest degree. But even
+the merest mention of the almost innumerable hunting grounds and
+trout streams, and the hundreds of mountain and sea-side resorts, from
+Washington to Mexico, would, of itself, make a volume of no mean size.
+I am, therefore, restricted to the mention of only a few of the more
+attractive places where good sea fishing can be found, coupled with
+such accommodations and surroundings as appeal to the discriminating
+pleasure seeker.
+
+
+CATALINA ISLAND.
+
+Almost due south of Los Angeles, and about twenty miles from the
+mainland, is the far-famed island of Catalina.
+
+It is still a debatable question whether it was the leaping tuna that
+made Catalina famous, or whether it was its many attractions, its
+facilities for sea fishing and its splendid accommodations, that gave
+the sport of tuna fishing a world-wide reputation.
+
+This beautiful island, with its diversified amusements; its grand
+scenery; its wonderful drives; its surf less sea bathing; its marine
+views; its perfect equipment for sea fighting, and its splendidly
+appointed hotel, has made it the Mecca to which the enthusiastic
+anglers of the world make their regular pilgrimages, for it seems to
+be the favored habitat of all the game fishes of the ocean, except the
+salmon and the striped bass.
+
+Catalina is the home of the Tuna Club, the greatest fishing
+organization of the world, with its international membership pledged
+to the promotion of scientific angling. It is here where the world's
+records are made, and the greatest feats in landing the fighting
+monsters of the sea have been achieved.
+
+In its variety of game fishes I know of no place to equal it. The
+leaping tuna, the albacore, the Spanish mackerel, the bonito, the chub
+mackerel, the white sea bass, the yellow-tail, and the California
+swordfish, the sensational fighter of the ocean, are all here and
+ready to give the light tackle angler the most exciting contest of his
+life.
+
+When the angler waits for the tides, he wants some other divertisement
+to occupy his mind. At Catalina he finds a pastime suitable to every
+hour, to every fancy, to every mood. He can bathe in its crystal
+waters; he can stroll along its pebbly beaches or climb its hills in
+search of wild goats; he can ride through its charming valleys, over
+its lofty peaks and around the dizzy heights that overlook the ocean;
+he can increase the elasticity of his step on its tennis courts, or
+exercise his muscle on its golf links. He can view the ancient relics
+of a departed people, study the strange and curious forms of ocean
+life in the extensive aquariums, or comfortably seated in a
+glass-bottomed boat, marvel at the extravagant splendor of the marine
+gardens, hundreds of feet below the surface, where sirens sing and
+mermaids are said to dwell. And, when he has gone the rounds, and
+longs again for more exciting sport, well--then he can go fishing.
+
+
+ [Illustration: HOTEL DEL MONTE]
+
+
+DEL MONTE
+
+Monterey Bay is pre-eminently the fishing ground for the Pacific
+salmon. As these gamy fish seek their spawning grounds, after their
+four-years' sojourn in unknown waters, they enter Monterey Bay at its
+southern headland and follow around it at varying distances from the
+shore. During this season the Hotel Del Monte, with its splendid
+appointments and scenic beauty, is the favored Mecca of the salmon
+anglers. Here boats with experienced boatmen, and a good supply of
+tackle and bait are always to be had. The contour of the peninsula,
+with its high mountain crest, forming the southern shore of the bay,
+is such that the strong winds of the open ocean is cut off from the
+Del Monte side, allowing the waters of this side of the bay to retain
+that smoothness that makes either boating or fishing a delight. This,
+too, may have something to do with the feeding habits of the salmon,
+thereby accounting for the usually large catches made by the guests of
+the hotel.
+
+While the Pacific Coast furnishes fine sport for the angler, both in
+its fresh and salt waters, with an infinite variety of gamy fishes,
+salmon fishing must be classed as one of the most satisfying. An
+angler likes to see his adversary and know with what he is contending.
+The salmon is a surface fighter, leaping high into the air when he
+finds himself impaled; and this sight of his beautiful sides,
+scintillating in the sunlight, quickens the pulsations of the heart of
+the angler and gives zest to the sport.
+
+Each section of the coast has its fish and fishing peculiar to itself;
+but I care not from what section the expert angler may come, he will
+enjoy the salmon fishing of Monterey Bay. He will do more; for the
+Hotel Del Monte is one of the delightful show places of the Pacific
+Coast. Space will not admit of an enumeration of the many interesting
+sights here to be seen. There are glimpses of California life a
+hundred years ago by the side of picturesque golf links and tennis
+courts. A modern hostelry hid away in the center of a primeval park. A
+seventeen-mile drive through shady mountain dells and along weirdly
+beautiful ocean coves and rocky crags. The marine gardens as seen at
+the bottom of the ocean through glass-bottomed boats. These, and many
+other interesting relics and inspiring scenes are the side attractions
+for the salmon angler who visits Del Monte.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FISHING PIER, DEL MAR]
+
+
+DEL MAR.
+
+Del Mar is one of the few beach resorts where the pleasure-seeker can
+divide his time among the whole range of out-door amusements. The long
+pleasure wharf and the miles of just that character of beach where the
+whiting, the croaker, the chub mackerel and the young sea bass love to
+feed, offer the finest of still fishing. If he is ambitious for a
+contest with the big fighting fishes of the deeper waters, he can take
+a boat and soon be floating over the haunts of the yellow-tail, the
+albacore and the bonito. If he prefers the report of the gun to the
+music of the reel, a short walk back from the hotel brings him into
+the country of the game little quail.
+
+Again, he can, by a short ride to the ponds and lagoons, change from
+upland to waterfowl shooting.
+
+But the gamut is not yet run; for within easy reach are several
+mountain streams where he can cast his flies on their waters with good
+returns. And, if he seeks to pit his cunning and his skill against the
+watchful deer, a pleasant and interesting ride over a good motor road,
+takes him into the wilds of the Cuyamaca mountains.
+
+But the sportsman in his outings will always think of his comforts as
+well as his sports, and for those Del Mar has planned with a lavish
+hand.
+
+It is not all of the enjoyment of a good meal to have a choice
+selection of viands, admirably cooked by an experienced chef, and
+served in the most approved manner. It is not all of a good night's
+rest, after the fatigue of a day's sport, to have lain on a downy bed
+in a richly appointed room. Agreeable service; the affability of the
+management; the pervading air of welcome; the society of congenial
+companions; the beauty of the situation; the inspiring views; the
+charm of the many scenes that each day photographs upon the memory,
+adds a relish to the menu which no chef can compound, and a
+restfulness to one's slumber that the ingenuity of no upholsterer can
+supply. For a part of these delightful adjuncts to one's enjoyment, I
+am willing to give credit to the excellent taste of the founders of
+Del Mar. But the beauty of its surroundings, the possibility of its
+charming individuality, must be credited to those exclusive gifts
+which nature first bestowed upon it.
+
+Del Mar is twenty-two miles from San Diego and 111 from Los Angeles,
+and can be reached from either of these cities by the Santa Fe
+railroad, or by a good motor road, distinguished for its many
+interesting views.
+
+
+ [Illustration: AQUARIUM, VENICE]
+
+
+VENICE
+
+That there is but one Venice in America is the verdict of all who have
+visited this charming sea-side resort. Its oriental architecture, and
+its numerous canals, on whose surface floats in Italian ease, real
+Venetian gondolas, give it an atmosphere suggestive of the
+Mediterranean. But it is not of its Venetian aspect, nor its endless
+chain of amusements, from its surf and plunge bathing to its
+rollicking scenic railroad and hair-raising dash through its cavernous
+rapids, or its hundred or more interesting pastimes for the pleasure
+seeker, that the attention of the reader is herein directed.
+
+It is to those forms of sea life that contribute to his pleasure that
+his attention is called, for the waters of Venice furnish a wonderful
+variety of these, as will be seen by a visit to the large aquarium
+maintained on the pier by the University of Southern California. From
+the wharfs he can angle for smelt, mackerel and perch, as well as for
+halibut and other bottom fishes. From the beach, by bait-casting into
+the surf, he is rewarded with croaker, whiting (erroneously called
+corbina), and young sea bass, locally known as sea trout.
+
+By taking a launch and going out into the open water, his ambition to
+bring to gaff the larger species of the deeper sea can be gratified
+with strikes from the tuna, the albacore, the bonito, the mackerel and
+the yellow-tail that will give him a contest worthy of his metal.
+
+These launch trips upon the bosom of the open ocean, are among the
+chiefest pleasures of our beach resorts, for the angler not only finds
+keen sport in the landing of these larger fishes, but an exhilarating
+recreation, restful to the mind and healthful to the body.
+
+Then, when his day's sport is over, whether his outing is only for a
+day, or for the several weeks of his vacation, His comforts are to be
+considered. In these Venice offers as wide a range as it does in its
+amusements. At the splendidly appointed Hotel St. Marks he can find
+the most luxurious accommodations; he can dine at one of its
+deservedly popular cafes; or, if he wants to spend his vacation in
+restful quietude with his family, he can take a furnished villa on the
+bank of one of the canals, hidden away in a wealth of flowers and
+forest trees, with the sea breeze tempered to a balmy zephyr. To this
+sequestered home he can bring his fish, fresh from the sea, and
+broiling them to his particular taste, enjoy the last delight of the
+angler's day of sport.
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX TO ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ DOVES--
+ Mourning Dove, 40
+ White-winged Dove, 40
+
+ DUCKS--
+ American Golden-eye, 84
+ American Scaup, 78
+ Barrow's Golden-eye, 90
+ Blue-bill, 78
+ Butter-ball, 86
+ Canvasback, 74
+ Gadwall, 56
+ Harlequin, 86
+ Mallard, 54
+ Pin-tail, 66
+ Red-head, 76
+ Ring-neck, 80
+ Ruddy, 82
+ Scoter, White-winged, 91
+ Shoveler, 68
+ Spoon-bill, 68
+ Sprig, 66
+ Teal, Blue-winged, 64
+ Teal, Cinnamon, 62
+ Teal, Green-winged, 60
+ Widgeon, 58
+ Wire-tail, 82
+ Wood Duck, 70
+
+ FISHES--
+ Albacore, 155
+ Bass, Small-mouthed, Black, 149
+ Bass, Striped, 151
+ Bass, White Sea, 167
+ Bonito, 157
+ Croaker, Yellow-fin, 171
+ Mackerel, Chub, 161
+ Mackerel, Spanish, 159
+ Salmon, Chinook, 130
+ Sand-sucker, 169
+ Skip-jack, 157
+ Swordfish, 165
+ Trout, Eastern Brook, 145
+ Trout, Rainbow, 135
+ Tuna, Leaping, 153
+ Whiting, California, 169
+ Yellow-tail, 163
+
+ GEESE--
+ Black Brant, 104
+ Brown Brant, 94
+ Cackling Goose, 94
+ Canada Goose, 94
+ Emperor Goose, 102
+ Honker, 94
+ Little White Goose, 98
+ Ross Goose, 98
+ Speckle-breast, 100
+ Snow Goose, 98
+ White-cheeked Goose, 96
+ White-fronted Goose, 100
+
+ GROUSE--
+ Oregon Ruffed, 46
+ Sage Hen, 48
+ Sharp-tail, 50
+ Sooty, 42
+
+ PHEASANT, Mongolian, 36
+
+ PIGEON, Band-tailed, 40
+
+ QUAIL--
+ Arizona, 18
+ Bobwhite, Virginia, 28
+ California Valley, 14
+ Elegant, 22
+ Gambel, 18
+ Massena, 26
+ Montezuma, 26
+ Mountain, 10
+ Plumed, 10
+ Scaled, 20
+
+ SHORE BIRDS--
+ Avocet, 124
+ Curlew, Sickle-bill, 117
+ Curlew, Hudsonian, 117
+ Dowitcher, 111
+ Godwit, 115
+ Ibis, White-fronted, Glossy, 107
+ Marlin, 115
+ Plover, Black-bellied, 120
+ Plover, Mountain, 122
+ Plover, Ring-neck, 122
+ Plover, Snowy, 122
+ Snipe, Jack or Wilson, 111
+ Snipe, Red-Breasted, 111
+ Yellow-legs, 113
+
+ TURKEY, Mexican Wild, 32
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+ ANATIDAE, family, 9
+
+ ANATINAE, subfamily, 73
+
+ ANSERENAE, subfamily, 53
+
+ ANSERES, order, 9
+
+
+ BAY AND SEA DUCKS, 75
+
+
+ CHARADRIDAE, family, 11
+
+ COLUMBIDAE, family, 11
+
+ CYGNINAE, subfamily, 11
+
+
+ DOVES--
+ Mourning Dove, 41
+ White-winged Dove, 41
+
+ DUCKS--
+ American Golden-eye, 85
+ American Scaup, 79
+ Barrow's Golden-eye, 87
+ Blue-bill, 79
+ Butter-ball, 87
+ Canvasback, 75
+ FulvOus Tree Duck, 72
+ Gadwall, 61
+ Harlequin Duck, 89
+ Lesser Scaup Duck, 81
+ Little Blue-bill, 81
+ Long-tailed Duck, 59
+ Mallard, 59
+ Old Squaw, 89
+ Pin-tail, 69
+ Red-head, 77
+ Ring-neck, 81
+ Ruddy Duck, 83
+ Scoters, 89
+ Shoveler, 69
+ Spoon-bill, 69
+ Sprig, 69
+ Subfamily, genus & species, fresh-water ducks, 73
+ Subfamily, genus & species, salt-water ducks, 92
+ Teal--
+ Blue-wing, 67
+ Cinnamon, 65
+ Green-wing, 63
+ Widgeon, 61
+ Wire-tail, 83
+ Wood Duck, 71
+
+ FISHES--
+ Albacore, 156
+ Yellow-fin, 156
+ Bass--
+ Black, Large-mouth, 148
+ Black, Small-mouth, 148
+ Striped, 150
+ White Sea, 168
+ Baracuda, 166
+ Bonito, 158
+ Croaker--family, genus and species, 173
+ Spot-fin, 172
+ Yellow-fin, 170
+ Jewfish, 166
+ Mackerel--family, genus and species, 162
+ Chub, 160
+ Green-back, 160
+ Spanish, 158
+ Sacramento Pike, 150
+ Salmon, 131
+ Salmon--family, genus and species, 162
+ Blue-back, 133
+ Chinook, 132
+ Dog, 134
+ Hump-back, 134
+ King, 132
+ Redfish, 133
+ Silver, 134
+ Sock-eye, 133
+ Sand-sucker, 168
+ Skip-jack, 158
+ Swordfish, 164
+ Trout--family, genus and species, 147
+ Colorado River, 144
+ Cutthroat, 142
+ Dolly Varden, 144
+ Eastern Brook, 144
+ Golden, 138
+ Lake Tahoe, 143
+ Lake Southerland, 143
+ Rainbow, 136
+ Rio Grande, 143
+ Silver, 142
+ Steel-head, 140
+ Tuna, 152
+ Whiting, California, 168
+ Yellow-tail, 160
+
+ FISHING RESORTS, 174
+ Catalina Island, 175
+ Del Mar, 179
+ Del Monte, 177
+ Venice, 181
+
+
+ GAME BIRDS OF THE PACIFIC COAST, 9
+
+ GAME FISHES OF THE PACIFIC COAST, 129
+
+ GAME FISHES OF THE SEA, 152
+
+ GEESE OF THE PACIFIC COAST, 93
+
+ GEESE, FAMILY, GENUS AND SPECIES, 53
+ Black Sea Brant, 103
+ Brown Brant, 97
+ Cackling Goose, 97
+ Canada Goose, 93
+ Emperor Goose, 101
+ Honker, 93
+ Hutchins Goose, 97
+ Little White Goose, 99
+ Ross Goose, 99
+ Speckle-breast, 101
+ Snow Goose, 99
+ White Goose, 99
+ White-cheeked Goose, 95
+ White-fronted Goose, 101
+
+ GROUSE--Family, genus and species, 43
+ Canadian Ruffed, 47
+ Oregon Ruffed, 45
+ Sage Hen, 51
+ Sharp-tail, 52
+ Sooty, 44
+ Spruce, 49
+
+
+ PHEASANT, Mongolian, 35
+
+ PIGEON, Wild, 39
+
+ PIGEONS AND DOVES, 39
+
+
+ QUAIL--Family, genus and species, 11, 30
+ Arizona, 19
+ Bobwhite, 27
+ Bobwhite, Masked, 29
+ California Valley, 15
+ Elegant, 24
+ Gambel, 19
+ Massena, 25
+ Montezuma, 25
+ Mountain, 12
+ Lower California, 13
+ Plumed, 12
+ San Pedro Mountain, 13
+ Scaled, 21
+ Chestnut-bellied, 23
+
+
+ SHORE BIRDS--Family, genus and species, 110, 118
+ Avocet, 125
+ Cranes, Rails and Gallinules, 109
+ Curlew, Sickle-bill, 119
+ Hudsonian, 119
+ Dowitcher, 112
+ Godwit, 114
+ Herons and Ibises, 108
+ Marlin, 114
+ Plover, family, genus and species, 126
+ Black-bellied, 121
+ Mountain, 121
+ Ring-neck, 123
+ Snowy, 123
+ Wilson, 125
+ Rails, 109
+ Sandpiper, Red-backed, 116
+ Snipe, family, genus and species, 118
+ Jacksnipe, 110
+ Red-breasted, 112
+ Wilson, 110
+ Stilt, Black-necked, 127
+ Willet, 116
+ Yellow-legs, 114
+
+ SWANS, 105
+
+
+ TUNA CLUB, 172
+
+ TURKEYS, Wild, 31
+ Mexican, Wild, 31
+
+
+ WATERFOWL, 55
+
+ WADERS AND SHORE BIRDS, 106
+
+
+
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | FISHING TACKLE |
+ | |
+ | Chas. H. Kewell Co. |
+ | 436-438 Market St. |
+ | San Francisco, Cal. |
+ | |
+ | Manufacturers and Patentees |
+ | |
+ | Trout Flies-Dry & Wet |
+ | |
+ | KEWELL-STEWART SPOON Kewart |
+ | Reg. U. S. Patent Office |
+ | KEWELL-LAFORGE SPINNER |
+ | |
+ | Write for Catalogue P |
+ | |
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | [Illustration: Man in boat fishing]|
+ | |
+ | |
+ | Tufts-Lyon Arms Co. |
+ | |
+ | Sporting Goods |
+ | GOOD SHOOTING GOODS |
+ | Special Tuna and Swordfish Tackle |
+ | |
+ | Los Angeles, California |
+ | |
+ | |
+ |[Illustration: Men in rowboat fishing] |
+ | |
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ ++==========================================================++
+ || A FULL LINE OF ||
+ || ||
+ || Sporting Goods ||
+ || ||
+ || SHOTGUNS RIFLES ||
+ || =Parker, Ithaca=, =Hopkins & Allen= ||
+ || =Remington, Stevens=, =Winchester= ||
+ || =Winchester, Marlin=, =Remington= ||
+ || =Hopkins & Allen=, =Stevens= ||
+ || =Ainsley H. Fox=, =Savage= ||
+ || =L. C. Smith= =Marlin= ||
+ || Marble's Game-Getter Gun ||
+ || ||
+ || REVOLVERS AUTOMATIC PISTOLS ||
+ || =Harrington & Richardson= =Smith & Wesson= ||
+ || =Hopkins & Allen= =Savage= ||
+ || =Smith & Wesson= =Mouser= ||
+ || =Iver-Johnson= =Loger= ||
+ || =Colts= =Colts= ||
+ || Stevens Target Pistols ||
+ || ||
+ || AMMUNITION ||
+ || ||
+ || U. M. C., Winchester, Selby--Field and Trap Shells ||
+ || Dupont, Ballistite, New E. C., Schultz Powders ||
+ || ||
+ || =Blue Rock Traps and Pigeons= ||
+ || ||
+ || HUNTING CLOTHING ||
+ || Our Own Make of Khaki, Canvas, Corduroy Suits ||
+ || Hats and Leggins. ||
+ || ||
+ || Shaw-duck Ulsters, Coltskin Reafers, Duluth Mackinaws, ||
+ || Knit Jackets, Webber-stitch Coats, Roughneck ||
+ || Sweaters, Flannel Shirts, Knit Caps, ||
+ || Woolen Socks. ||
+ || ||
+ || Laced Boots and Hunting Shoes. ||
+ || Oiled Clothing, Rubber Suits and Boots. Sleeping ||
+ || Bags, Oregon Blankets, Comforts, Bedding Rolls, ||
+ || Carryall Bags, Ponchos and Knapsacks, Packsaddles, ||
+ || Kyaks, Water Bottles and Canteens. ||
+ || ||
+ || ====================================================== ||
+ || The Wm. H. Hoegee, Inc. ||
+ || ||
+ || 138-40.42 South Park ||
+ || LOS ANGELES, CAL. ||
+ ++==========================================================++=
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------+
+ | I Mounted The |
+ | [Illustration] African Collection |
+ | OF |
+ | Stewart Edward White |
+ | |
+ | ------------------------------------------ |
+ | If You want high grade taxidermy send |
+ | me your trophies |
+ | |
+ | Albert E. Colburn |
+ | 806 South Broadway |
+ | LOS ANGELES, CALIF. |
+ +--------------------------------------------------+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------+
+ | A KODAK |
+ | |
+ | is as necessary to your hunting outfit as your |
+ | gun, and a shot with it often far more |
+ | satisfactory because it is |
+ | |
+ | A LASTING PLEASURE |
+ | |
+ | Everything you need in the Kodak Line will |
+ | be found at the |
+ | |
+ | Earl V. Lewis Company |
+ | |
+ | Two Stores 226 West Fourth St. |
+ | 306 West Seventh St. |
+ | |
+ | Bring your films for developing and printing |
+ +--------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+
+ The text presented here is that contained in the original printed
+ version. Other than the typographical corrections listed below and
+ a number of minor corrections, the following changes were introduced:
+
+ 1) Paragraphs split by illustrations or tables were rejoined.
+
+ 2) The illustration captions were placed above the section describing
+ the species illustrated.
+
+ 3) The following errata notes displayed on the bottom of pages 112,
+ 114 and 116 have been applied:
+
+ "In the make-up of a few pages on the shore birds, the
+ scientific names have become transposed. They should read:
+ Page 112: Dowitcher (Macrohampus scolopaceus).
+ Page 114: Yellow-legs (Totanus melanoleucus).
+ " " : Marlin (Limosa fedora).
+ Page 116: Red-backed sandpiper (Tringa alpina pacifica).
+ " " : Willet (Symphemia Semipalmata inornata)."
+
+ 4) There appears to be text missing under the description of
+ "WILSON'S PLOVER" in the "Measurements" section on page 125.
+ A note was inserted to that effect
+
+ 5) The AE ligature which was used in the caption of the image on
+ page 122 has been changed to the letters "AE" for consistancy
+ with the way those names are displayed elsewhere in the book.
+
+
+ Typographical Corrections
+
+ Page Correction
+ ==== ====================
+ 11 Banapart => Bonapart
+ 61 "Male" added for consistancy
+ 66 Spatula acuta => Dafila acuta
+ 77 Aythya amaricana => Aythya americana
+ 98 Chen rossi => Chen rossii
+ 108 Plegadis gaurauna => Plegadis guarauna
+ 108 Gaura alba => Guara alba
+ 109 Grus mericana => Grus canadensis
+ 109 GALLINUL => GALLINULES
+ 109 Grus mericana => Grus americana
+ 121 Charadrous squaterola => Charadrius squatarola
+ 125 AVOSET => AVOCET
+ 136 Loch Loven => Loch Leven
+ 167 Cygnocian nobilis => Cygonoscion nobilis
+ 172 SPOT-FIN CRAOKER => SPOT-FIN CROAKER
+
+
+ Emphasis Notation
+
+ _Text_ - Italics
+
+ =Text= - Bold
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Game Birds and Game Fishes of the
+Pacific Coast, by Harry Thom Payne
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GAME BIRDS AND GAME FISHES ***
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