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-Project Gutenberg's In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
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-Title: In a Cheshire Garden
- Natural History Notes
-
-Author: Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
-
-Release Date: July 16, 2012 [EBook #40249]
-
-Language: English
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-Character set encoding: ASCII
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN A CHESHIRE GARDEN ***
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40249 ***
In a Cheshire Garden
@@ -881,7 +844,7 @@ are hunting in and out the yews and Scotch firs, sometimes a large
party, sometimes only a single pair.
One June day I was sitting in a cousin's garden in Wales, when out of
-an arbor-vitae close by appeared a dilapidated-looking gold-crest, which
+an arbor-vit√¶ close by appeared a dilapidated-looking gold-crest, which
set to work violently and persistently to abuse me. Herein, I think,
like the whitethroat mentioned before, it displayed either a perversion
of instinct or a want of sense. If it had only kept quiet I should not
@@ -3105,361 +3068,4 @@ Page 84: Changed "neast" to "least."
End of Project Gutenberg's In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40249 ***
diff --git a/40249-8.txt b/40249-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 07add21..0000000
--- a/40249-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3465 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
-
-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: In a Cheshire Garden
- Natural History Notes
-
-Author: Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
-
-Release Date: July 16, 2012 [EBook #40249]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN A CHESHIRE GARDEN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by sp1nd, Diane Monico, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-In a Cheshire Garden
-
-
-[Illustration: The Flower Garden.]
-
-
-
-
-In a Cheshire Garden
-
-Natural History Notes
-
-BY
-
-GEOFFREY EGERTON-WARBURTON,
-
-_Rector of Warburton_.
-
-
-LONDON
-
-SHERRATT AND HUGHES
-
-Manchester: 34 Cross Street
-
-1912
-
-
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-These Notes appeared from April to June this year in _The Warrington
-Guardian_ and afterwards came out in a de-localised form in _The
-Staffordshire Weekly Sentinel_.
-
-I am indebted to the kindness of Mr. P. Ramsdale, of Heatley, for the
-photographs of The Old Church, The Yew-tree, and The Flower Garden (as
-it was some years ago).
-
-My thanks are due also to Mr. Garrett for kindly allowing me to use his
-very interesting photograph of The Two Nests referred to on page 94.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. Introductory 1
-
- II. Weeds and Alien Plants 5
-
- III. Birds--Thrushes 11
-
- IV. Chats, Robins, and Warblers 26
-
- V. Tits and Wrens 37
-
- VI. Wagtails, Flycatchers, Swallows, and other Insect-eaters 46
-
- VII. Sparrows and other Finches 57
-
-VIII. Finches, Starlings, and Crows 67
-
- IX. Other Birds 77
-
- X. British Mammals 95
-
- XI. Dogs and Cats 103
-
- Index 113
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
-Flower Garden _Frontispiece_
-
- FACE
- PAGE
-Old Church 6
-
-The Old Yew 23
-
-The Sundial 38
-
-A Corner in the Garden with Allium Dioscorides 55
-
-Two Nests 70
-
-The Food-stand 87
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-
-Although much of the neighbourhood has become semi-urban and any idea
-of rural seclusion is destroyed, at least in summer, by the crowds that
-find their way to it from Manchester and other large towns, yet the
-Cheshire village of Warburton in which this garden is situated is a
-real country place still. How long it will remain so is another thing.
-One salt works has been set up at Heatley about a mile away and we are
-now (1912) promised another, while there is every prospect of land
-being let for works in Warburton itself. Who knows, in a few years
-perhaps the whole place may be reduced to the desolation of another
-Widnes. Then, when it has become a rare thing to find even a blade of
-grass on the dreary black waste or to see any bird but a grimy sparrow,
-a record of what was once here may be strange reading.
-
-The garden itself about which I write is quite on the northern boundary
-of Cheshire, in old days divided from Lancashire by the Mersey only.
-The soil is light and sandy, not far from the rock in places and in
-places with water at a very little depth below the surface. It is well
-suited to hollies and rhododendrons, both of which grow abundantly and
-luxuriantly, as also do yews. There are a good number of ordinary
-deciduous trees, chiefly on the old bank of the river, such as oak,
-sycamore, chestnut, birch, beech, and alder, but no conifers of any age
-except one or two Scotch firs. There is one flourishing deadara which I
-planted myself and a few young Austrian pines that seem to be doing
-well.
-
-A spruce fir that I once planted behaved in an extraordinary way;
-instead of growing straight, it shot up in a zigzag fashion, the
-leading shoot one year going off at an angle of 60 degrees or so, and
-the next year harking back and starting in the opposite direction at
-about the same angle.
-
-Few of the trees can be more than 80 years old. I think most of them
-would have been planted by my father, who was rector from 1833 to 1849.
-There is however a remarkable old yew in the adjoining churchyard. The
-half of it, just below where the branches spring, measures nearly nine
-feet round. The other half has entirely gone, so has practically the
-whole of the substance, the wood of the trunk, and what is left of the
-still standing side is little more than a shell with a coating of bark.
-Notwithstanding this there is quite a fair-sized head of leafy young
-branches (which by the way has greatly increased since I first remember
-the tree 40 years ago) growing up amidst the ruins of the old
-far-reaching boughs. These yet remain to tell something of the wide
-and grateful shade they once afforded to our "rude forefathers" as on
-summer Sundays they waited for service to begin, just as I remember the
-last generation gathered and gossipped under younger yews when this was
-the Parish Church. This yew is the "thousand-year-old tree" of the
-clerk's tale to visitors, and if one thinks how many years of slow
-growth it must have taken to form a trunk of that thickness, say 18
-feet in circumference, and how many more for it to have decayed away to
-its present condition, it does indeed carry us back to an early date in
-English history when the little green shoot that sprang from the
-crimson-coated seed first saw the light.
-
-One great drawback from a gardener's point of view is the prevalence of
-strong, cold, N.-W. winds in spring. The winters are not so severe as
-they often are further south, but the late spring frosts are sometimes
-disastrous. We have had potatoes cut down by frost as late as June
-21st, but the worst spring frost I have known was in May, 1894, just
-about the time that Queen Victoria came to Manchester to open the Ship
-Canal. On three consecutive nights, May 19, 20 and 21, there was frost,
-and its intensity seemed to increase each night. Not only were potatoes
-cut, but garden peas and many hardy herbaceous plants and even common
-weeds. (I noticed that those with a northern aspect suffered least.)
-The shoots and buds of roses were scorched, and the young leaves of
-most trees and shrubs. Hollies suffered especially, but even yew and
-rhododendron, oak, sycamore, and chestnut did not escape. The only tree
-that weathered the cold with impunity was the hawthorn, the tenderest
-leaves and tips of which were not injured. (This was not the case
-though in the severe frost of Easter 1903.) Royal, male, and lady ferns
-were shrivelled up to a greater or less degree, but parsley and oak
-fern were unharmed.
-
-We miss one gardener's friend here, but we escape the attentions of one
-enemy. Though frogs are common enough, toads are very rare. I remember
-to have seen only one during all the many years I have known the
-garden. On the other hand, whilst I have a dim recollection of having
-once found an old snail-shell, I cannot say for certain that I have
-ever seen a snail, though of shell-less slugs in all sizes there is no
-scarcity.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-WEEDS AND ALIEN PLANTS.
-
-
-A slight knowledge of botany adds greatly to the interest of a garden,
-and is besides often of practical value. With such knowledge, one forms
-a habit of looking even at weeds with some interest, and this has led
-to my finding several strange plants among them. I have for example
-come across the following in the kitchen garden:
-
-"Saponaria vaccaria," with its curious angled calyx and pretty pink
-flower.
-
-"Galium tricorne," very much like common goose-grass or cleavers, but
-rare in England, and quite unknown in this neighbourhood.
-
-Annual mercury (closely allied to the common perennial Dog's mercury),
-green and dull-looking, only of interest because it is rare.
-
-"Holosteum umbellatum," which again is rare and not much more
-attractive to the casual observer.
-
-"Draba muralis," allied to "Shepherd's purse," and not unlike it, but
-as rare as that is common.
-
-"Melilotus officinalis," a graceful yellow pea-flower. When this first
-appeared it was quite a stranger in these parts, but afterwards for
-several years it was continually turning up in different corners of
-the garden, indeed even in 1911, twenty-six years since its first
-visit, I found a stray specimen.
-
-"Ranunculus arvensis," a weak-looking buttercup with curious rough seed
-vessels.
-
-"Scandix Pecten-Veneris," an ordinary unattractive umbelliferous plant,
-but with extraordinary long beaks to the fruit, which are supposed to
-be like the teeth of a comb. Both of these are I believe common in
-other parts of the country, but they are unusual here.
-
-"Poa nemoralis," a stranger grass of elegant growth, came one year in
-the rougher part of a rock-border. It was made welcome and kindly
-treated, but though allowed to follow its own devices and though
-several seedlings sprang up round it, they were all gone in a year or
-two. A rarer grass still, "Setaria glauca," once turned up in a
-cucumber frame.
-
-In 1907, a seedling fig came up close to the wall of the house. It has
-now (1912) several shoots about eight feet long. The same year another
-seedling fig appeared in the kitchen garden, and that too I have
-transplanted to a warm corner of the house-wall, where it has made a
-nice bush.
-
-For several years we have found seedling tomatoes growing in the
-kitchen garden, and in 1911 we gathered seven pounds of green tomatoes
-from two plants to make into jam.
-
-[Illustration: Old Church.]
-
-When first I came here, and for a long time afterwards, "Erysimum
-cheiranthoides" was always among the kitchen garden weeds, and one year
-I found growing in a bed of onions its near relative "Erysimum
-orientale," which is quite a rare British plant.
-
-Greater celandine, a rather handsome perennial with somewhat glaucous
-leaves and bright yellow flowers, used to be an abundant weed on the
-banks and among the bushes, and is still (1911) to be found in the
-garden, though in diminished quantity.
-
-In 1889, a strange plant appeared which puzzled me a good deal at
-first. It was tall and straggling, but had no flowers. Next spring
-there were several of the same plants, very much branched with
-something of the habit of a mugwort, and long spikes of flowers at the
-end of every branch. I discovered it to be a species of "Ambrosia," a
-native of North America, but I soon discovered also that it increased
-by underground runners in every direction, and was only too thankful to
-get rid of it.
-
-Two years before, I had found another visitor, this time from South
-America, with bright yellow flowers, evidently allied to forget-me-not,
-which proved to be an "Amsinckia" (intermedia ?). There were about 20
-plants of this annual in one border and several others in other parts
-of the garden. With some consideration, but with no particular care on
-my part, it has maintained itself in more or less quantity in the same
-herbaceous border ever since.
-
-In 1897, a single plant of an "Allium" appeared and grew to a height of
-more than five feet, straight up with very stout stems, one and a half
-inches in circumference, and handsome heads of reddish-green
-bell-shaped flowers on drooping stalks, which afterwards, in fruit,
-became quite straight and upright. I found it to be "Allium
-Dioscorides," a native of Sicily and Sardinia. There were many tubers
-at the root when I took it up, but none of them ever grew so tall and
-fine as the original.
-
-One or two plants that I have introduced myself have proved very
-tiresome weeds. In 1875 or thereabouts, I brought back from the wild
-part of a large garden in the neighbourhood a balsam with rather a
-conspicuous yellow flower ("Impatiens noli-me-tangere," I think). It
-made itself at home at once, but as it would keep within no bounds, I
-have done all I could "to get without it," as they would say here, but
-it defies me to my face and in spite of relentless persecution, again
-and again every spring it comes up smiling in an abundant crop.
-
-So indeed does a tall polygonum ("P. cuspidatum" I believe it is) that
-I brought back from the same garden about the same time. It absolutely
-refuses to budge from the place where I first allowed it to grow. It
-does not perpetuate itself by seed like the balsam, but from little
-odds and ends of rootlets and suckers that hide themselves in the soil.
-
-What I take to be a variety of "Oxalis corniculata," a very pretty
-little thing with dark reddish-brown leaves and deep yellow flowers, is
-another uncontrollable subject. It is perennial and yet increases by
-seed as fast as a balsam.
-
-A plant which on the top of a stone wall is very pretty, "Linaria
-vulgaris," has proved a veritable plague to me in the garden. I had it
-sent to me originally by a nurseryman for the "Peloria" variety, and as
-if the disappointment of that were not enough, it added insult to
-injury, or rather injury to insult, by running below the surface in a
-provoking and persevering manner and showing itself in most unexpected
-places. Although the normal "vulgaris" is so irrepressible, I have
-found "Peloria" quite the reverse, and have never been able to keep it
-above a year or two.
-
-The double-flowered varieties of most plants are, as a rule, more
-difficult than the ordinary single, but a little potentilla ("reptans"
-?) with a yellow ball of double flower has proved an exception here. No
-single-flowered plant could get over and under the ground faster than
-this has done.
-
-In 1886, in an out-of-the-way path among trees, an orchid, "Epipactis
-latifolia," came up in the very middle. I took care that it was not
-disturbed, and found it again in exactly the same place four years
-later, no sign of it having been seen in the interval. Never before, or
-since, have I found a plant of that or any other orchis growing wild in
-the garden.
-
-One year (1887) in a border nearly full of rhododendrons, close to the
-front door, a curious looking thing made its way above the ground,
-which, at first sight might have been put down as something between a
-hyacinth and a lily-of-the-valley, but was said to be "Muscari
-comosum." I had never planted it and during the fifteen years that I
-had been here had never seen anything like it. I very carefully marked
-the spot when it died down, but from that time to this (1911) during
-all the 24 years that have passed it has never shown itself again.
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-BIRDS--THRUSHES.
-
-
-You can feel something like affection even for a plant, when you have
-watched over it and attended to its likes and dislikes as to aspect,
-soil, moisture, shade and so on, and when it has responded to your care
-and rewarded you for the pains you have spent upon it, but birds become
-personal friends, it is an interest and amusement to study their
-characters and habits, and a delight to listen to their voices. And
-this friendship is not for any one particular bird (though of course
-there may be that sometimes), but for the particular species of bird,
-any one of which that you happen to meet with anywhere seems like an
-old friend. A lively impudent tom-tit for instance is the same amusing
-companion and it is the same pleasure to hear his cheery note, whether
-you find him in a suburban garden or in some shady corner of a wood.
-
-Of course it is a day to be marked with a white stone when you come
-across a new or a rare bird, but if you watch the commonest
-sympathetically and intelligently you have an endless fund of interest
-and amusement. The quarrels, the loves, the boldness and ingenuity even
-of a sparrow may divert your mind pleasantly and help you to put away
-worries. Then how eagerly in spring does one listen for the first note
-of a willow-warbler, what an interest is the first sight of a swallow,
-and how gladly one welcomes each of our summer visitors as in turn they
-arrive from passing the winter in the Sahara oases or among our friends
-in the Transvaal or Cape Colony.
-
-In a country unexplored or newly settled it may not be the same, but in
-England there is no need to spoil the charm of friendship by use of the
-collector's gun. All British birds have been so well illustrated and
-described that it ought to be possible to tell most of them by careful
-observation without actually having them in one's hand. In the
-interests of science, to make sure of the discovery of a new species or
-the distribution of a known one, birds must sometimes be shot (and
-after all to be shot is a less cruel end than to fall a prey to their
-natural enemies), but to shoot a well-known bird simply for the sake of
-its skin is another matter. A man who shoots every rare bird he sees,
-that he may add it to his private collection, is sacrificing bird-life
-for his own selfish pleasure and disregarding the sentiments and
-interests of the great body of nature-lovers and students. The true
-naturalist does not collect specimens as he would postage stamps; to
-study the life of a wren in its natural surroundings is more to him
-than anything he can do with the dried skin of a golden eagle.
-
-They say that there is in Switzerland a law which forbids the shooting
-of any bird without a licence. If some such law could be enforced here,
-rare birds that seek hospitality among us would no longer be at the
-mercy of every idle lout who happens to have a gun. And is it
-impossible that children might be taught to find pleasure in watching,
-and not, as seems generally the case now, in destroying life?
-
-We often have a pair of missel-thrushes ("shercocks" in Cheshire)
-nesting here. Generally they build in a tree at some distance away,
-where they make their presence known by noisy attacks on other birds;
-but once they had their nest in a Scotch fir close to the house, and
-then they were so quiet as almost to escape notice altogether.
-
-There were two nests in the old churchyard this year (1912). One in a
-Spanish Chestnut was about thirty feet from the ground, in the middle
-of a clump of little shoots that grew straight up on the top side of a
-thick branch. This branch overhangs a patch of grass running close to
-the boundary wall and on this green boys were playing football with
-much shouting and noise every evening. The nest stood out plainly to be
-seen, and for a week before they flew (which they did on April 20th)
-you could easily count all four young ones. The other nest was in a
-yew, under which there is a seat in summer, and was simply set on the
-top of one of the lowest spreading boughs without any attempt at
-concealment. It was at the end of the bough and not six feet from the
-ground, within easy reach of anyone. It could, however, only be seen
-when you were actually under the tree and probably would never have
-been noticed at all but for the behaviour of the birds themselves.
-After the eggs were hatched they attacked everybody who went under or
-even near the tree, swooping down suddenly from you didn't know where
-and almost dashing into your face, indeed they would often hit your
-hat. I am glad to say this display of courage was not wasted, for the
-young birds safely flew on May 17th.
-
-Missel-thrush is said to be short for mistletoe-thrush, and to mark the
-singular taste of the bird for mistletoe berries. Mistletoe is scarce
-with us, but they do appear to depend more upon berries of every kind
-than either throstles or blackbirds, and one year I remember when the
-yews bore an extraordinary crop of berries, the trees were quite alive
-with the missel-thrushes that came to eat them. I would say, by the
-way, that a great part of the holly berries are sometimes left
-untouched by birds, and I have seen trees in summer quite red with the
-berries of the previous year.
-
-One or two missel-thrushes generally come to the food-stand in winter
-and show themselves expert in getting fat from the supposed
-sparrow-proof receptacles.
-
-Though missel-thrushes are common their song is not familiar. It has
-been described as much better than a throstle's; I do not know if that
-is the general opinion. It certainly is simpler without the same
-repetition, and it has seemed to me more mellow, more like a
-blackbird's when I have heard it, but that is not often. Throstles will
-sometimes sing continuously all the winter through, and early in the
-year I have listened most carefully to catch the notes of their bigger
-brothers, but only very seldom with success. They have, however, an
-autumn song which I first noticed at the end of September a good many
-years ago. I became aware one day of a bird's song that seemed to be
-sometimes the note of a blackbird, sometimes of a throstle. After
-listening for several days I came to the conclusion that it must have
-been one of the many starlings that were singing everywhere, one that
-had learnt more or less successfully to imitate a throstle. However, I
-never could make sure, for I never could catch sight of the singer, he
-would hide himself in a holly or a yew, and would at once stop singing
-if I went near. At last, one day I heard him at the top of a sycamore
-which was nearly bare of leaves, and managed to bring a glass to bear
-on him; even then his body was hidden by a bough and his head was all
-that I could see, but the head was plainly that of a thrush. While I
-watched I could distinctly see him turn his eye down on me, and he was
-off in an instant; but though I only got a glimpse as he flew away,
-there was no mistaking the flight of a missel-thrush. It seemed curious
-to me at the time that he should be singing at all then, and that he
-should be so shy about it.
-
-Song-thrushes, or throstles as they are called in Cheshire, are always
-plentiful, but not always to the same extent. They were, for instance,
-very much thinned in numbers by the hard winter of 1895, but in a
-couple of years they abounded again, and I heard people complain of
-their night's rest being spoilt, there were so many and they sang so
-early and so loud. From April to June they sing almost incessantly,
-from earliest light until quite dark. They begin at three in the
-morning, or even earlier, and sing their loudest for about an hour;
-then there seems somewhat of a lull, but they soon start again in full
-chorus, and go on singing more or less throughout the day, sometimes
-until past nine at night. In 1905, on the longest day of the year, I
-woke at 2-30 a.m. to hear a throstle in full song just outside my
-window, and at 9-30 p.m. a throstle, almost certainly the same bird,
-was singing in the same place. I have often wondered how, with so much
-time devoted to musical exercises, they manage to find enough for the
-more important business of feeding themselves and their hungry broods.
-
-A blackbird's song is, I think, always a love song, but mere exuberance
-of spirits will make a throstle sing. I have seen one sing snatches of
-his song whilst hunting for worms on the grass, as though he were too
-full of joyousness to contain himself, and a couple of them will sing
-at one another during intervals of quarrelling on the ground. There
-seems at all times more rivalry and contention between throstles
-throughout the whole season, and less of the spirit of _camaraderie_
-that one so often sees with blackbirds, at least when once they have
-settled the momentous question of pairing.
-
-Within the bounds of general similarity much variety can be heard in
-the songs of throstles; no two seem to be exactly alike, and some birds
-are far better singers, have a much clearer, more musical note than
-others.
-
-In 1907, and again in 1909, I noticed that throstles were in full song
-everywhere on July 15th, just as though it had been the middle of May.
-
-A particular throstle will choose his favourite spot to sing from, and
-will keep to it more or less throughout the season. The point of a
-gable of the house is one such place (it is a Cheshire belief that a
-throstle brings you good luck when he chooses your house to sing
-from), the top of the highest chimney has been another, and the
-weathercock on the outbuildings has been chosen year after year by a
-throstle as his own peculiar stand. This last is a favourite platform
-for the musical performances of other birds as well; a robin constantly
-uses it, and a swallow, and more than once I have seen a little wren
-there singing away with all his might, a might altogether out of
-proportion to his tiny body.
-
-Whilst most throstles seem to like as high a perch as possible to sing
-from, I remember one that habitually poured forth the flood of his
-melody raised above the level of the ground by a clod of earth only.
-
-One morning (in March, 1897) I heard a throstle uttering a peculiar
-shrill kind of cry, not a long-drawn-out note such as I have twice
-heard from a blackbird, but a succession rather of short notes. At
-first I couldn't make out what or where the noise was, but traced it
-after a time to the thrush, who continually uttered the cry as he was
-hunting for worms on the grass.
-
-A standing marvel is the way in which a thrush can tell that there is a
-worm below the ground at a particular place. As he goes hopping about
-in a promiscuous sort of way, he suddenly stops with his head on one
-side looking and listening for a second, then he pounces on the exact
-spot and forthwith pulls out a worm. Sometimes he makes a mistake, or,
-at all events, fails to make a catch, but not often. How does he do it?
-Does his quick sight detect some slight movement, or his quick ear some
-slight sound? Or has he any other sense of smell or sensation that
-helps him? Another marvel about the matter to anyone who has himself
-tried to pull a worm out of the ground is the ease with which a thrush
-manages so neatly and quickly to extract its victim entire.
-
-I have found a throstle's nest in the side of a haystack, and was told
-of one in a pigstye and of another inside the porch of a house. In 1901
-a throstle built in the roof of the lychgate of the churchyard close to
-this garden. Although the first nest was taken she made another in the
-same place and had very nearly hatched her eggs when again the
-thoughtless cruelty of boys made all her labour vain and abused the
-confidence she had so bravely shown in men. She used to sit on quite
-calmly, though only just above the heads of people as they went through
-the gate.
-
-Generally speaking, throstles are so tame here that they hardly move
-out of your way, at most hopping a foot or two further off; and one
-will go on with his song undisturbed as I pass through an archway of
-pink thorn on which he is perched not two feet above. They are
-naturally, I think, more friendly in their disposition towards human
-beings than blackbirds, which go clattering off whenever they see you
-near them.
-
-In May, 1902, there must have been at least 20 throstles' nests in the
-garden itself. There were five, all in holly bushes, within 30 yards,
-by the side of one path, two in one tree, both of which had young ones
-in them at the same time. One bird had a nest just over the entrance to
-the house porch, through which we were in and out the whole day long,
-and we saw nothing of it until the young were hatched. Another chose an
-extraordinarily exposed situation, in a rhododendron just opposite the
-front door, from which we could see her quite plainly as she sat. The
-nest was actually not more than a foot or so from a little narrow path.
-We were constantly up and down this path and could hardly avoid
-brushing the leaves at the end of the very bough on which the nest was
-built, yet I never once saw her fly off. She used to keep her eye on
-us, but did not move even if we stood still only a few feet away and
-looked at her. This nest was under continual observation from the
-laying of the first egg to the flight of the last nestling, which
-remained for the best part of a day after the rest had flown.
-
-On the other hand, in strange contrast to this confidence, there were
-three nests farther away from the house (one indeed absurdly close to a
-gate in constant use), from which the birds flew off with a loud,
-startled cry if one waited for a moment near them. In one of these
-three nests the brood was reared, but of the other two one was deserted
-and one taken.
-
-In 1899 a friend in the village assured me that there had been a
-throstle's nest with eight eggs in it close to her house. As only four
-of them, she said, hatched, perhaps the first hen was killed after she
-had laid her complement of eggs, and the cock brought home another mate
-to his ready-made nest.
-
-I find a note that once I saw throstles join with starlings in their
-raid upon elder-berries, but I have seen nothing since to confirm this.
-
-Until the winter of 1910-11 I very seldom found a throstle attempt to
-get the fat put out for tits; they generally content themselves with
-the crumbs that have fallen on the ground underneath. If the weather is
-at all severe they will come with sparrows to the fowls' food, but in a
-sharp, continuous frost they disappear almost entirely. (Blackbirds and
-some missel-thrushes remain.) This was very marked in February, 1902.
-Before the severe cold began throstles were plentiful; after it had
-continued for a few days not a single one was to be seen; but when the
-thaw set in, in less than a week they abounded again on every side.
-
-Some redwings come here every winter, but they are less common than
-fieldfares and they are not so noticeable. The points of difference
-between a redwing and a throstle, the rather smaller size, the red on
-the side, the slight variations in shades of colour and markings, may
-easily be passed over.
-
-I have from my window seen a single redwing quite close to the house,
-in company with a single fieldfare, both busy with the holly berries,
-and in February, 1909, I saw all five of the commoner British thrushes
-collected together and between them quite covering a field which had
-lately been broken up by a subsoil cultivator.
-
-A farmer tells me that the local name for redwing is "Kit," but I see
-in "The Birds of Cheshire" that "Kit" is given as one of the names for
-fieldfare.
-
-We see fieldfares chiefly when they first arrive in October, and again
-in early spring, before they leave, but, of course, there are some with
-us most of the winter. The people here call them "Bluebacks," and it
-was remarked as a curious thing in the late cold spring of 1891 that on
-April 24th bluebacks were heard on one side of a field and a cuckoo on
-the other.
-
-[Illustration: Old Yew Tree.]
-
-Blackbirds are, I think, nearly as plentiful as throstles, in spite of
-relentless persecution by strawberry-growing market gardeners.
-Sometimes, indeed, one is oneself compelled to own that we have a few
-more blackbirds than we really want. In hot, dry summers, when the
-ground is hard, they do much damage to the apple crop. Not content with
-making short work with the "windfalls," they peck holes in some of the
-best fruit on the trees. I noticed this especially in 1899, and again
-in 1901 and 1911. In 1899 I saw four cock blackbirds amicably devouring
-a fallen apple together.
-
-Though a blackbird's song is beautifully mellow, it is generally
-disconnected and fragmentary, but I remember hearing one once that
-seemed continuous, or at least much more so than usual.
-
-One day at the end of March (in 1895) I saw perched on a twig of an oak
-tree and sitting quite close up against the trunk, a cock blackbird,
-which continually uttered a small, thin sharp note, almost like the
-squeaking of a slate pencil. He sat still in the same position for a
-considerable time, only opening his mouth at intervals of about a
-minute, or half a minute, to make this doleful noise. The same year, on
-June 15th, in exactly the same place, a cock blackbird went through
-exactly the same performance.
-
-Every winter blackbirds have been amongst the most regular pensioners
-at the food-stand.
-
-Several times during May in 1898, and again in 1899 and 1900 and since,
-I noticed a meeting of three, always, I think, three, cock blackbirds
-at one particular spot, always the same, near a holly tree on the
-lawn, which happens to be just opposite my window, where I could watch
-them easily and unobserved. They seemed to go through a regular set
-performance, like a game or a dance. They did not fight, though they
-sometimes sparred a little, but ran round and round and in and out,
-following and passing one another. It reminded me of a friendly
-gathering of husbands for amusement, while their wives were busy with
-household cares at home!
-
-I was much interested one day (March, 1902) in the proceedings of two
-pair of blackbirds. One very elegant cock, slender and graceful, with
-intensely black coat and very bright orange bill, was seeking to
-impress the hen of his choice by a series of little runs on every side
-of her, with his tail spread out and sweeping the grass, his body in
-the shape of a bow, his beak almost touching the ground; meanwhile, the
-object of all this attention seemed to consider it a mere matter of
-course and to be calmly indifferent. Presently another cock, not nearly
-so spruce, came on the scene accompanied by another mate. The gallant
-dandy evidently had no stomach for fighting, and promptly disappeared
-behind a holly bush when the newcomer threatened to assault him. His
-partner, however, was made of sterner stuff, and without more ado
-attacked and drove away both the intruders.
-
-I have never heard that there is any real difference in size, but hen
-blackbirds appear bigger than cocks, just as young gulls in immature
-plumage seem larger than old ones. I suppose the different colour has
-something to do with it, and perhaps the cock's feathers are more
-closely set than the hen's.
-
-My wife told me that she had seen one evening in September (1907) 16
-blackbirds on the tennis ground together. This seems perhaps rather a
-large order, as they say, but in the following September I counted nine
-myself, to the best of my belief, all of them cocks.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-CHATS, ROBINS AND WARBLERS.
-
-
-In spring, and again in autumn, wheatears pass through, and may be seen
-about for several days at a time. In April and May, 1908, a pair stayed
-so long in some rough ground near the bank of the Ship Canal that I
-thought they might be going to take up their quarters there for the
-season, but by May 31st they had disappeared.
-
-We always have a fair number of whinchats in the meadows, and hardly a
-year passes without seeing them on the grass in the garden itself. One
-very wet summer, when in the low-lying lands the haycocks were standing
-for days surrounded by water, I remember being struck by the number of
-whinchats to be seen perching and chatting first on one haycock and
-then on another.
-
-Though whinchats are so comparatively common, and their usual note,
-exactly like the knocking of two pebbles together, is constantly heard,
-their pretty little song, a cadence of a few notes repeated over and
-over again, I do not remember to have noticed here.
-
-Only once have I seen a stonechat in the neighbourhood of this garden.
-This was in October, 1890. On the opposite side of the river the land
-had been raised by material excavated in the making of the Ship Canal,
-and was at that time wild and covered with a strong growth of all kinds
-of weeds. It was on a wire fence that ran along this bank that I saw
-the bright little bird. And there, with a curious pendulum-like
-movement of its tail, it continued to sit for a considerable time,
-giving me ample opportunity to study it leisurely through a
-field-glass.
-
-Though redstarts are not uncommon in Dunham Park a few miles away, only
-once have I seen one in the garden, in August, 1894. It stayed for
-several days, and was never far away from the place where I first saw
-it. I noticed that other birds who are at home here, wagtails
-especially, seemed to look upon it as an interloper and resented its
-intrusion.
-
-One of the first things that I remember about the natural history of
-Warburton is a brood of four white--or more strictly speaking,
-cream-coloured--robins that were hatched in a neighbouring garden in
-1872. They were jealously watched over by the owner of the garden, and
-I often saw two of them until the autumn. Then they must either have
-been taken (and many people were after them) or have moulted to the
-ordinary robin colours, for we saw them no more.
-
-Robins are plentiful in the garden and in the neighbourhood generally.
-They show much courage and skill in getting at the fat on the
-food-stand, no matter how greatly the difficulties of doing so may have
-been multiplied.
-
-It has been said that robins have more power than most birds to see
-through the window into a room, and I certainly have observed that
-though as a rule neither robins nor tits take much notice if I am
-standing close by the window, yet sometimes a robin appears that will
-spy me out as I sit by the fire quite far away and be off in an
-instant. I have sometimes wondered if such wild robins might be
-immigrants from the Continent, where by all accounts they are less tame
-than in England.
-
-Robins are pugnacious, and their duels are not unfrequently to the
-death. I have seen a robin pursue a sparrow and even fly straight at a
-great-tit and knock it off the food-stand, but I have noticed that
-generally a robin makes way for a sparrow, and seldom stands up to a
-tit of any kind, not even a marsh or a coal-tit, birds hardly half its
-size. I remember one, however, in the winter of 1900-01 who
-indiscriminately attacked all tits on the food-stand. He was very
-friendly with me, and used to watch as I filled the receptacles, when
-he would come close up and wait for a bit to be thrown to him, and
-often as he saw me coming he would sit on a corner of the porch roof
-and warble a little song of welcome. Another year (1901-02) two,
-sometimes three, and occasionally four, robins would be there together
-almost under my feet and ready to pick up anything I threw them. Very
-unlike most robins, they seemed on perfectly good terms with one
-another.
-
-In November, 1905, a robin used to come into the house through the open
-windows and make himself quite at home; he would sometimes sit and sing
-on the bannisters in the hall.
-
-I saw a very tame robin at Budworth in 1904. I was in the garden with
-the lady to whom it belonged when the bird flew on to her hand, and he
-used to come into the drawing-room without any hesitation and take his
-place at afternoon tea.
-
-In 1910 a pair of robins built in the pulpit desk of Oughtrington
-Church near here, and hatched out four young ones. A friend who went to
-service one Sunday evening in June saw a robin flying about and singing
-until the sermon began, but then it took up a position on the back of a
-seat near the pulpit and looked up at the preacher, quite silent and
-apparently listening.
-
-One of the prettiest little episodes of bird-life is the delicate
-attention bestowed by a robin on the chosen partner of his joys and
-cares that I have several times witnessed during April and May. Whilst
-she remained watching and waiting on the ground below, he would fly up
-to the food-stand and secure a morsel which, with a tender grace, he
-presented to her. The gallant devotion so plainly expressed by the one
-and the caressing, coquetting airs of the other were most amusing. I
-have seen, too, about the same time of the year, one robin feeding
-another with flies picked from the grass and the lower boughs of a
-deadara tree. The robin that was being fed did not attempt to pick up
-anything for itself, but sat there on the grass quivering its wings and
-opening its mouth like a nestling.
-
-Robins often catch flies in the air, flying up from the ground after
-them, and I have seen one dart off from the branch of a tree, capture a
-passing fly and return again to the same perch, for all the world like
-a flycatcher.
-
-One showery day in spring I saw a robin on the food-stand washing
-itself in the rain, spreading out its wings, shaking its feathers,
-bobbing and ducking about as though it had been in a bath, and I have
-noticed one washing in wet leaves and drinking from the tips of leaves.
-
-Greater whitethroats are as common in this garden and neighbourhood as
-in most places. One that had its nest by the old river bank used to
-come and scold whenever I went near, and never ceased until I left.
-Such a proceeding looks like a case of instinct playing a bird false,
-and serving only to draw attention to what it is wished to conceal.
-
-Lesser whitethroats come to us every year, and may be said to be fairly
-common in the village. They are always shy and restless and more
-frequently heard than seen.
-
-There was a lesser whitethroat's nest one year (1898) in a holly bush,
-in which all five young ones used to be, whenever I looked at them,
-apparently sleepy, with their heads shoved up over the side of the
-nest. They never opened their mouths when we went near, and yet often
-as I watched I never saw the parents feed them.
-
-Blackcaps are not uncommon within easy reach of us, but only twice have
-I seen one actually in the garden. The first time the unusual sound of
-its wonderfully clear note attracted my attention was in July, 1899.
-The bird stayed here then for several days, singing occasionally all
-the while. The second time a blackcap came was in May, 1903. It was in
-the garden for about ten days, and I hoped it might be going to nest
-here, especially as one day I thought I saw a pair.
-
-I noticed a difference in habits between the July bird and the one that
-came in May. In July, when the joys and cares of family life were over,
-there was more deliberation and less shyness. I was able to watch the
-bird easily and for a long time together. In May he was restless and
-very wary, and it was with difficulty I could get a glimpse of him. He
-was always on the move, hunting about in the tops of the trees, and, I
-thought, singing in competition with the willow-wrens.
-
-The blackcap is often placed next to the nightingale as a songster, but
-there is a very wide interval between them. The most inattentive
-listener can hardly fail to notice a nightingale's song, but people who
-are not accustomed to distinguish the different notes of birds are
-often quite unaware of the presence of a singing blackcap, as the tone
-of his song mingles with the general chorus.
-
-Golden-crested wrens are not uncommon in winter, but I have never found
-a nest here. I notice them most often in October and November, as they
-are hunting in and out the yews and Scotch firs, sometimes a large
-party, sometimes only a single pair.
-
-One June day I was sitting in a cousin's garden in Wales, when out of
-an arbor-vitæ close by appeared a dilapidated-looking gold-crest, which
-set to work violently and persistently to abuse me. Herein, I think,
-like the whitethroat mentioned before, it displayed either a perversion
-of instinct or a want of sense. If it had only kept quiet I should not
-have thought of a nest, but it told me so plainly that it had one in
-that very tree that I looked as a matter of course and found it,
-packed with fully-fledged young ones.
-
-Chiffchaffs never stay with us, though they are to be found only a few
-miles away, but I sometimes see them and hear their well-known note in
-spring and autumn for a day or two.
-
-Willow-warblers abound ("Peggy whitethroat" is the Cheshire name), and
-it is a delight to catch for the first time each spring their lovely
-little song, of which, unlike the wearisome iteration of the
-chiffchaff, one never tires. The American naturalist, John Burroughs,
-describes the willow-warbler's strain as the most melodious he heard in
-England, and the only one exhibiting the best qualities of American
-songsters. He adds: "It is too fine for the ordinary English ear!" As
-if on a visit of a few weeks to a strange country he could possibly
-know what most English people either thought or liked!
-
-Willow-wrens as a rule keep pretty high up in the trees, but one
-sometimes sees them on the grass picking up flies or flying up after
-them in the air. Later on in summer they hunt for insects in the
-kitchen garden, and are often to be seen running up and down the
-pea-sticks.
-
-Though silent in July, they sing again after the middle of August. I
-have known a willow-wren's nest here in the middle of a roughish piece
-of ground that was continually walked over, about as unprotected
-position as you could wish, and yet the young were successfully reared.
-I have seen a willow-wren attack and drive away a perfectly inoffensive
-marsh-tit that happened to alight near it on the grass.
-
-The wood-wren, with its "sibilous shivering note," I have heard at
-Budworth, a few miles away, but never in this garden or immediate
-neighbourhood.
-
-The garden-warbler, too, is quite a stranger, and I have never
-recognised it in these parts at all. In May, 1900, I saw and heard one
-for several days in a garden in North Wales, where it is generally
-supposed to be unknown.
-
-Sedge-warblers sing incessantly when first they come, but after they
-have been here for a little while are much less frequently heard. They
-usually are hidden in the depths of a bush when singing, but I have
-seen one pouring out its impetuous song mounted on a telephone wire in
-the open, 20 feet from the ground, and another that sang as it was
-flying. For several years a sedge-warbler has begun to sing again here
-in July, not having been heard for some weeks previously. In 1907, for
-example, from July 24th to August 2nd, he could, without much
-exaggeration, be said to have sung all day and all night. I heard him
-at seven in the morning when I got up and at twelve at night when I
-went to bed, and I have a note of much the same thing in 1910, about
-the same date. The bird that year chose as his special platform the
-lower branches of a sycamore, and would every now and then fly off into
-the air singing all the while at the very top of his voice, and then
-return to the tree to sing again.
-
-Hedgesparrows are common enough all the year round, and are great
-favourites of mine. They are elegant birds in their modest way, they
-are unobtrusive and useful, and their song, if not brilliant, is
-pleasant, and like that of the wren and the robin, it helps to cheer
-the dull winter months when the more famous warblers are away enjoying
-the warmth of some sunny southern country.
-
-There is no month in the year in which at one time or another I have
-not heard the hedge-sparrow's song, but March is the time of all others
-to hear it, then it seems impossible to get away from it at any hour of
-the day.
-
-Hedgesparrows creep about in a mouse-like fashion peculiar to
-themselves, with a series of little running jumps, and the continual
-shuffling or flipping movement of their wings is very noticeable.
-
-They will take their share of the fowls' food with other birds, and
-will come all round the food-stand and pick up the minutest morsels of
-something on the ground, but (except in the case of a bird in the cold
-weather of January, 1902), I have never seen one make an attempt to get
-at the food on the stand itself.
-
-Sometimes on first turning out on a dark winter's morning, between
-seven and eight, hedgesparrows will be squatting on the path, and will
-almost let you walk over them before they get out of your way.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-TITS AND WRENS.
-
-
-Only once, in August, 1904, have I caught sight of a party of
-long-tailed tits in the garden, but a friend who lived hardly a mile
-away used to tell me that little parties of eight or nine might be seen
-flying through his orchard nearly every winter. I think he said they
-called them "churns," or something that sounded like that.
-
-Great-tits are common the whole year round; and very handsome they look
-when their suits of velvet-black and yellow are at their best. They are
-constant visitors to the food-stand, and are not baffled by any
-contrivance for excluding sparrows, but they are not so plucky or so
-clever at it as tom-tits. They are hectoring, full of bustle and
-importance, and make themselves generally disagreeable to other birds,
-but I have seldom, if ever, seen one great-tit attack another.
-Sometimes one sees a pair of the quietest possible character; on the
-most affectionate terms with one another they will come to the stand
-together and appear perfectly oblivious of the presence there of any
-other birds.
-
-It is not at all uncommon to see a great-tit with a crooked tail,
-slightly sickle-shaped. It cannot always be the same bird, for it is 16
-years since I first noticed a bird with such a tail, and nearly every
-year still (1912) I see one.
-
-One may often hear a tapping sound in trees and shrubs that is made by
-a great-tit, and I have watched the bird after considerable tapping
-draw out a grub of some sort from under the bark. I noticed on another
-occasion that a tit in making this tapping noise was beating something
-(through the glass it looked like a beetle) which it held in its beak
-against a bough of the tree.
-
-Like tom-tits, great-tits will fly off with grains of Indian corn, and,
-like coal-tits, they are fond of sunflower seeds. (In spite of what
-Gilbert White says, I have never seen tom-tits here touch sunflower
-seeds.)
-
-A great-tit has a note very much like the "pink, pink" of a chaffinch,
-which he occasionally uses.
-
-Though great-tits are, no doubt, handsome birds, they are not nearly so
-interesting in my opinion as either of the other three common kinds of
-tit. None of them, indeed, can really compare in interest with that
-audacious little villain, the tom-tit, or blue-tit, or, as he is called
-here, blue-cap. He is so full of spirits, so resolute and domineering,
-I delight to hear his cheery little song, if it is to be called a
-song.
-
-[Illustration: Sundial in Old Church Yard.]
-
-Tom-tits in abundance come to the food-stand, which in the first
-instance was specially intended for their benefit. They will come more
-or less the whole year through if the food is left there, but, of
-course, many more in winter than in summer, and most of all in February
-and the beginning of March, when I have counted twelve on the stand at
-once, but the numbers fall off very quickly towards the middle of
-March.
-
-I have noticed every year that at certain times of the day, especially
-from about 12.30 to 1.30, there is a marked increase in numbers. In
-winter at least no five minutes passes without one or more birds
-appearing, but at mid-day, and again to a lesser extent just before it
-begins to get dark, they seem literally to swarm.
-
-I have found that all tits, as well as sparrows and robins, prefer a
-mixture of bread and fat to fat alone. During February and March, 1897,
-I weighed all the bread and fat consumed on the food-stand and found
-that it was as nearly as possible eleven pounds. Lately I have added
-cocoanuts to the bill of fare; they are appreciated by the tits, but
-blackbirds, robins and thrushes prefer the bread and fat mixture, or
-rather they do not seem to care at all for the cocoanuts.
-
-It is curious to see how quickly birds discover that food has been put
-out on the stand. One year, after the receptacles had been empty for
-weeks in the summer, I put in some fat, and in less than five minutes
-a tom-tit was there. Another time I made a longish block of wood,
-bored nearly through with holes, which were filled with fat smoothed
-off level with the surface. This block was hung with the holes
-downwards, so that from above it could look like a bit of wood only. It
-was hung up at 10.30 a.m., and at 11.30 a tom-tit had found it out, and
-was eating away at the fat as he clung to the block back downwards.
-
-Tom-tits, unlike great-tits, bully one another most unmercifully. They
-can recognize each other at a great distance. A tom-tit on the
-food-stand seems to know at once whether another arriving on the
-nearest tree, some ten yards or more away, is his superior or inferior
-in prowess. Sometimes he will ruffle up his feathers as if in
-resentment at threatened intrusion, at other times he is prepared to
-make way at once. As is the case with a herd of cows on a farm, the
-relative standing between them seems to be an acknowledged matter and
-is seldom contested. To us a couple of tom-tits appear as like as two
-peas if we have them actually in the hand, and though it is easy to
-understand that they can themselves distinguish differences at close
-quarters, and may have some other sense than we have to help them, yet
-it is a marvellous thing that they can do so without doubt or
-hesitation at a distance of yards.
-
-The whole question as to how birds recognize one another is very
-interesting. We know that a shepherd can tell one sheep of his flock
-from another as easily as we can distinguish between two men, but in
-the feathered face of a bird there seems to us so little room for
-difference of expression, and, generally speaking, if we take feather
-by feather the description of one bird will apply equally well to any
-other of the same species.
-
-Tom-tits as a rule make way for a great-tit, but I have seen them fight
-occasionally, and the tom-tit does not always come off second-best.
-They are complete masters of both marsh and coal-tits, neither of which
-dream of resisting them. They pay scarcely any heed one way or another
-to sparrows or robins.
-
-Both tom-tits and great-tits in the flush of their spring-time ardour
-pay to their chosen helpmates the same delicate attentions as do
-robins. It is always a pretty picture to see them present their
-offerings of food, but with tits it seems a rather more business-like
-matter and to lack something of the tender sentiment so plainly shown
-by the robins.
-
-Though not nearly so plentiful as tom-tits, both marsh and coal-tits
-are with us more or less all the year round. Of the two, perhaps the
-marsh-tit is the more regular, sometimes a pair seem to make the garden
-their headquarters and to be always about, but several years may pass
-without our seeing one coal-tit; then they will become almost as common
-as tom-tits for a year or so, when again the number will dwindle down
-to, it may be, a single pair.
-
-Some years ago all four kinds of tit used to come together to the
-food-stand, but (with the exception of a pair of coal-tits in the
-winter of 1910-11) since 1899 tom-tits and great-tits have had it all
-to themselves, neither marsh nor coal-tits have been there, though both
-are still frequent visitors to the garden at all times of the year.
-
-In June broods of young tits appear flying from tree to tree in little
-parties. The old birds tirelessly hunt for food, whilst the
-greeny-yellowy little ones sit expecting and cheeping among the boughs.
-
-In comparing the marsh and coal-tits together one might imagine that
-they each originally had the same amount of black allowed them for the
-head, but while the marsh-tit preferred to have all his in one patch at
-the back, the coal-tit would have a bit cut out to make a bib for his
-chin! Of the two the marsh-tit is my favourite. I like the delicate
-tints of its more sober colouring better than the more contrasted yet
-more commonplace colours of the coal-tit.
-
-There seems something savouring of meanness about coal-tits; they are
-cautious and artful and carry away their food presumably to store,
-there is not time to have swallowed it before they are back again at
-the stand.
-
-A pair of coal-tits that were here one winter seemed quite demoralised
-by the food-stand, and to have altogether given up hunting for their
-natural food.
-
-Both kinds are perfectly amicable together, but a marsh will make way
-for a coal-tit. The marsh-tit seems to excite special animosity in
-tom-tits, whilst the coal-tit watches his opportunity, and, nipping in
-just at the right moment, escapes much persecution. Of the two the
-coal-tit has a more musical voice and a greater variety of notes, but
-once (in 1899) when watching a party of marsh-tits, I heard, besides
-the usual harsh note, a kind of continuous warble every now and then,
-which I could attribute to no other bird, though I could not actually
-see a marsh-tit uttering it.
-
-The delightful little wrens are always with us, and the loud, clear
-ringing notes of their sweet song may be heard almost throughout the
-year. In July, when most birds are silent, the wren does his best to
-make up for it, he seems to take a pleasure in having the field to
-himself, and his song may be heard, and often his alone every day until
-the middle of August. By that time some of the robins, having recovered
-from their moult, begin to tune up, and the wren leaves it to them to
-keep the ball going whilst he retires from the scene to complete his
-own change of feather. Apparently with such a tiny body to cover that
-is not a long business, for his bright little voice may be heard again
-early in September. I always myself feel inclined to say "thank you" at
-the conclusion of a wren's musical effort, and have been surprised to
-find that there are people, it may be many people, who do not hear his
-song at all of themselves, and when their attention is specially drawn
-think it "only a bird squeaking!"
-
-Wrens never seem to be tame in the same way that robins are, nor do
-they ever attempt to get at the food on the stand, or to share in the
-fowls' meals, but they often come close to the windows, creeping up and
-down the frames, in quest of spiders and other small game.
-
-A sight was reported to me the other day that I would have given a good
-deal to have seen with my own eyes. When for two days in January (1912)
-the ground was thickly covered with snow, I put a plate of scraps for
-the birds in the open porch. In the evening of the second day of snow,
-when the maid went to light the porch lamp, she saw this plate, as she
-described it, full of wrens (little birds with their tails turned up
-over their backs, she called them); there must have been, she thought,
-certainly not less than fifteen of them. When they saw her they flew
-off in a flock to the creeper outside, just where for two or three
-years there has been a wren's nest. Perhaps this little company was
-made up of the family that owned that nest as their home. In was in
-1909 that a wren first built there among the stems of the Virginian
-creeper close to the front door. The body of the nest was quite hidden
-between the creeper and the wall, the little entrance-hole alone being
-visible. We constantly saw the bird going in and out, taking a turn to
-stretch his wings or bringing home provisions for his household, and
-often he would sit close by and give vent to his feelings in a joyous
-burst of song. He appears to have been pleased with the success of his
-first venture on this site, for he has used the very same nest for the
-last two years.
-
-A wren has the same directness of flight as a kingfisher or a dipper;
-it has none of the up and down course of most small birds, but it
-follows a bee-line to its destination, with rapidly-beating wings, but
-making comparatively slow progress. I was much struck by this, as one
-day I watched a wren fly from a low bush to a height of 40 or 50 feet
-up a poplar, it seemed to take quite an age to get there.
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-WAGTAILS, FLYCATCHERS, SWALLOWS AND OTHER INSECT-EATERS.
-
-
-Pied wagtails never entirely desert us, though, of course, there are
-many more, and they are much more in evidence, in summer than in
-winter. It is a continual pleasure to watch them, to see the speed with
-which they run in pursuit of a fly, the deftness of the capture, and
-the satisfaction so plainly displayed at the feat, by the eloquent
-balancing of the long tail. One day in August (1899) I watched a
-wagtail through a glass, and distinctly saw him capture and devour four
-"daddy-long legs" in succession. Besides running after them on the
-ground, they will often fly up at insects in the air.
-
-Pied wagtails are no respecters of persons as far as other birds are
-concerned; I have seen a single wagtail at one time pursuing a peewit,
-at another a sandpiper, and their encounters with swallows on the grass
-are most amusing to watch. When the swallows are flying low the
-wagtails will deliberately fly at them and even for a little way after
-them.
-
-A family of pied wagtails usually take possession of the lawn opposite
-one of our windows, and we can observe the process of education in the
-art of catching flies, from the stage in which the young are content
-to be fed entirely by their parents through that in which they
-supplement the supply by their own efforts, until finally little
-difference in skill is to be noticed between old birds and the young.
-This family appear to resent the intrusion of other birds on their
-domain (as shown in their behaviour towards swallows), and I have seen
-them persistently drive away young yellow wagtails who presumed to
-trespass on their hunting ground.
-
-Yellow wagtails are not so often seen in the garden, though they are
-plentiful enough in the neighbourhood. They are lively and attractive
-and their bright colour contrasts strongly with the freshly ploughed
-earth so that their arrival is always noticed by the farmers and seems
-to interest them more than the coming of any other migrant except the
-cuckoo.
-
-Meadow pipits are common in the fields around, but I cannot remember
-ever to have seen one actually in the garden. On a rough bit of ground
-near the Ship Canal bridge they are always to be found, and I have
-watched one there for twenty minutes or more at a time as he soared up
-to a considerable height, singing all the time, and then came down
-again to the ground with wings and tail spread out, after the manner of
-a tree-pipit, with a little musical twitter just as he landed. It kept
-repeating this performance over and over again all the time I was
-there.
-
-For some years a tree-pipit used to take up his abode with us every
-summer and give us the benefit of his energetic song. I was very much
-amused once to watch him on some iron hurdles at the end of the garden.
-He was so much in earnest and so full of energy; he would sing a little
-bit, then run along the top rail a little way, then sing again, and so
-on until he had gone nearly the whole length of the railings. This
-entertainment he went through day after day for a fortnight or more at
-the end of June and the beginning of July.
-
-Spotted flycatchers have not been as common with us lately as they were
-at one time, when they always made their home here during their summer
-visit to this country, and were constantly in evidence. We have not had
-a nest for several years, and last year (1911) I did not see a single
-flycatcher in the garden, but this year, I am glad to say, they have
-come back again and there has been a nest in the ivy on the house wall.
-It was placed so low down that we could easily look into it, but never
-once did I surprise the old bird; she seemed to hear one's footsteps at
-a distance, and long before one reached the nest she was off. The young
-were hatched on June 29th, but their eyes did not open until July 6th.
-Whilst they were blind and as they grew bigger the nest seemed much
-too small for them, and often one fancied two of them must inevitably
-have been smothered, as they were quite hidden under the other three.
-Even after they could see there was some confusion during the heat of
-the day; but it was one of the prettiest sights imaginable when they
-were tucked in for the night; all five heads with their sharp little
-beaks and bright black eyes were arranged in perfect order, all looking
-together in the same direction out of the nest. People in the village
-call these birds by the name of "old man," and it seems expressive,
-somehow peculiarly appropriate to their greyish colouring and quiet
-unobtrusive manners.
-
-For five years running a pair of flycatchers built in a fork of a thick
-ivy-stem on the old church tower. They chose a most exposed place by
-the side of a walk trodden by dozens of visitors to the church nearly
-every day of the summer. The first time we noticed it (in 1894) the
-nest was so low and so exposed that nothing could save it. In 1895,
-when it was placed higher up and better concealed, the young were
-successfully reared. In 1896 they chose a position actually not more
-than three feet from the ground, and yet, marvellous to relate, owing
-to watchful care on the part of human friends, and the continual
-replacing of a screen of ivy leaves, they scored another success. In
-1897, though the site was higher up and apparently much safer, the
-young birds were taken, but in 1898 they were again able to escape the
-attentions of cats and boys and bring off their brood without mishap;
-in 1899 they wisely abandoned the dangerous situation altogether.
-
-I was once watching a flycatcher perched on the food-stand opposite and
-close to my open window, when I noticed that besides a
-constantly-repeated weak single note, it had every now and then a
-cadence of two and again of three notes, and sometimes a very faint
-kind of inward warble.
-
-The iron boundary hurdles on the south side of the garden are a
-favourite stand for flycatchers, and I have seen them busily occupied
-there in catching flies, which they carried to their young ones in the
-trees near by, whilst every now and then the prettily-marked youngsters
-would themselves come down to the top rail and sit there to be fed.
-Croquet hoops on the grass near these hurdles seem to have a great
-attraction for them. Two, sometimes three, would be there at the same
-time. After each pursuit of a passing fly they would return now to the
-same hoop, now to another, and sometimes they seemed to go the round of
-all the hoops in turn. Every day throughout the summer they would be
-there, and in the white line under each hoop was left indisputable
-evidence of their regular occupation.
-
-Towards the end of July, 1902, we were much interested in a pair of
-flycatchers with their little family of three. One of the old birds
-would spend its time catching flies for the young ones, whilst the
-other rested, sitting quite unconcerned by itself on the rails. When
-the working parent brought a fly to one of the family the other two
-would hurry up, and there was constantly a small crowd of four
-gesticulating little birds in one part or other of the lawn. Between
-the intervals of being fed the young birds learnt to forage for
-themselves, not, I noticed, flying off the ground after insects, but
-running after them on the grass. These five birds stayed with us until
-September 9th. They often flew down from the trees to catch flies on
-the grass, and would hover in front of shrubs and tall plants whilst
-they picked off the flies near them.
-
-When flycatchers have been on the croquet hoops and swallows were
-flying low, they had not seldom to get pretty sharply out of the way to
-avoid a collision, as the swallows appeared purposely to fly at them.
-
-In 1908 we were fortunate enough to see a bird here that is very seldom
-found in Cheshire, namely, a pied flycatcher. It was in the evening of
-August 25th that we saw it. The strange little bird came quite close up
-to the French window of the room in which we were sitting, and we
-noticed plainly the white patch on his wing. It did not seem at all
-shy, and I watched it about the house for an hour or so.
-
-It is said in "The Fauna of Cheshire" that while birds are sometimes
-seen during the spring migration, there is no other record of a pied
-flycatcher in Cheshire on the return journey in autumn.
-
-Of swallows there is no lack. Nearly every year there are one or two
-nests in the outbuildings, and in 1900 a pair began to build against
-the wall of the house porch just over the front door. The wall was
-perfectly flat, and they began to fasten mud against it as a
-house-martin would have done. To save possible untoward consequences to
-the hats of visitors I rigged up a shelf over the door; this, perhaps,
-frightened them, at any rate, they did not go on with their work.
-
-In 1908 a pair set their minds on building in the old church, and build
-they did in spite of all we could do in the way of keeping doors and
-windows shut (they must have found their way through some broken quarry
-of a window). However, when we saw that we were beaten we made the best
-of it, and really there was very little mess, and it was pleasant to
-hear them warbling in the roof. When the young birds were hatched in
-July the old ones were more wary than ever. If they saw anyone in the
-church, instead of going on to the nest, they would turn back and fly
-away with their mouthful of dainties. However, by hiding, I managed to
-see the nestlings fed, and noticed that though they were very
-vociferous when they guessed there was an immediate prospect of their
-hunger being satisfied, a warning note from the old bird seemed to
-silence them at once.
-
-For a good many years a pair of swallows have nested in the porch of
-the new church, and in 1910 an old trimmed straw hat that hung on a
-nail in an outbuilding at the church-house was chosen by another pair
-as a suitable foundation for their nest, and in this rather
-strangely-placed nursery they brought up a young family.
-
-There is something very charming in the swallow's warbling song, beyond
-its association with warm and beautiful weather; and when in autumn
-they are congregating by thousands, to hear them all chanting together
-as they fill the air, and, sailing round and round in widening and
-interlacing circles, mount higher and higher until the highest are
-almost out of sight, is to my mind wonderfully grand and impressive.
-
-Sometimes the swallows melt away without any noticeable gatherings,
-while in other years they assemble in such flocks about the end of
-September that in certain favourite hunting grounds the sky is almost
-darkened by them, and to watch the intricate maze of perpetual motion
-is enough to make one giddy, while as at intervals they sit resting,
-they seem to stretch away for miles in long lines on the telegraph
-wires.
-
-Swallows and wagtails apparently grudge one another (and flycatchers) a
-share in their insect sporting rights, if their mutual spitefulness has
-any meaning. This common taste for the same kind of food often brings
-the three into close quarters, and it is curious to notice the
-different methods they use to compass the same end; the swallow
-ceaselessly rushing at full speed through the air, the wagtail trusting
-to his nimbleness of foot, and the flycatcher making a series of little
-excursions upwards after his prey. I have seen swallows walking about
-on the grass and picking up flies, and when their young ones are
-resting on the ground they will often bring them food there, alighting
-by the side first of one and then of another.
-
-Ten years ago it was only on two or three houses in the village that
-house-martins built, and they were seldom seen except in the immediate
-neighbourhood of these, but now (1911) they have become comparatively
-abundant everywhere. The wooden hay-sheds recently put up at many of
-the farms seem to have attracted them in the first instance, but when
-once they were led to look more closely into the matter they evidently
-found that there were many more eligible building sites in Warburton
-than they had had any idea of before. They have never yet made their
-real home with us, but during the latter part of the summer they come
-in crowds to the garden, and there are among them many only just able
-to fly, who spend most of their time on the roof of the house, waiting
-to be fed.
-
-[Illustration: A Corner in the Garden with Allium Dioscorides.]
-
-Two house-martins fell down a bedroom chimney here, and when I opened
-the window to let them out, whilst one took advantage of it at once the
-other kept flying round and round quite close up to the ceiling and
-resting on a bell-wire that ran across. It was a long time, more than
-half an hour, before I could persuade him that he was looking in the
-wrong place for a way of escape.
-
-At one time after the Ship Canal had been begun and traffic had ceased
-on the river, a large colony of sand-martins established themselves
-under the disused towing-path almost opposite, and naturally they were
-then plentiful enough. Now, as far as we are concerned, the river with
-all its belongings is a thing of the past, and it is only occasionally
-that we see the little brown birds hawking for flies in the garden.
-
-I was surprised not long ago to find in a field-sandpit, a mile away
-from any other sand-martins' nests that I knew of, a solitary nest in a
-hole within easy reach of my hand. The young must have been hatched,
-for I watched the birds go in with food.
-
-Sand-martins have a peculiar interest as being perhaps the most
-universally distributed of all small birds. One likes to think that
-nearly everywhere one went, in Asia, Africa or America, the very same
-little brown swallows might be seen ceaselessly flitting about,
-bringing back to mind the green fields and cloudy skies of home in
-England.
-
-Only once have I seen that other cosmopolitan, the tree-creeper, in the
-garden. One morning in May, 1895, I heard a strange, small, rather
-shrill song and found that it came from a little brown tree-creeper on
-an oak just opposite my window. I watched it for some time through
-field glasses as it climbed about, prying into every crack of the bark
-and singing as it worked.
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-SPARROWS AND OTHER FINCHES.
-
-
-Although I have never myself seen a goldfinch in the garden, they have
-been seen here, and on the rough ground near the Ship Canal they are
-not uncommon, indeed, I have heard of several shillings a week being
-made by birds that have been caught there in spite of County Council
-orders. They are usually known here as "red linnets," but another
-Cheshire name for them is "nickers."
-
-Greenfinches (green linnets in Cheshire) abound; in early spring they
-are more than usually conspicuous, as in their brightest feather they
-pursue one another in and out among the hollies and dark yew hedges.
-Though then less evident to the eye, throughout the summer they let us
-know by their unmistakable and wearisome notes that they are with us
-still.
-
-As early as April 29th, in 1890, I watched a greenfinch on a thorn
-opposite my window feeding what appeared to be a fully-fledged young
-one. It was pumping up the food from its craw, in the same way that a
-pigeon does. The end of April is so unusually early for a greenfinch
-family to have flown, that perhaps it was only another instance of
-delicate marital attention, such as I have noticed in the case of
-robins and tits.
-
-In February, 1893, a hen hawfinch was shown me. It had just been shot
-in the village, and in 1894 I heard of a nest in the gardens at Lymm
-Hall, rather more than two miles away.
-
-My wife told me one morning in October, 1910, that she had seen on a
-tree near her window a thick-set bird with a big head and short tail
-and neck, whose colour she described as some shades of brown. Two or
-three little birds appeared to be mobbing it, and it kept pecking at
-them like a parrot. She only saw it for a minute or two, before it flew
-away round the corner of the house. It altogether sounds as though it
-might have been a hawfinch.
-
-House-sparrows abound here, and are interesting and amusing to the
-unprejudiced looker-on who doesn't suffer from their depredations.
-There is no denying that sparrows are vulgar, and bold and pushing, or
-that they are tiresomely persevering in the mischief that they do. They
-are coarsely built and have no song, while their monotonous chirp is
-distracting, but they have that which for the race of life stands them
-in more stead than either beauty or musical talent; they have courage
-and intelligence, a wonderful power of adapting themselves to
-circumstances and a sound healthy constitution, with a digestion that
-an ostrich might envy.
-
-The food-stand has shown me what sparrows are and what they can do.
-When I set it up I had no wish to feed sparrows, and could not bear to
-see them devouring all before them in the greedy, systematic way that
-they have. So I set my wits to work to see if I could not contrive
-something by which they might be baffled without depriving the tits of
-their food. It proved more than I could do to prevent any of the
-sparrows getting any of the food, but I was able to make it more
-difficult for them, so difficult that only a few could manage it. They
-differ very much individually: some are far bolder and more
-enterprising than others, but I have found that some sparrows can do
-almost anything that a tit can do in the way of acrobatic performances,
-though not, of course, with the same easy grace. I tried many devices.
-I had seen somewhere that if food were suspended from a pliable twig
-only tits would venture to attack it. It didn't take long to prove the
-fallacy of this idea. The swinging of the net made not the slightest
-difference to the sparrows; they alighted on it just as readily as if
-it had been lying on the ground. Then I tried hanging the net at one
-end of a stick and a movable weight at the other. The stick acted as a
-balance, and the net went down directly a bird settled on it. This
-instability frightened the sparrows for a long time, but in the end
-they got quite used to it. It was the same with many other contrivances
-that I tried, they answered their purpose for a time, it may be
-altogether as far as most went, but in every case sooner or later some
-sparrows learnt to overcome every difficulty, and it struck me that
-each successive year they seemed to do so more easily, as though they
-turned the experience of one year to good account in the next.
-
-In 1899 I made an apparatus like a windmill, with four arms, and food
-in a kind of little box at the end of each. The arms, of course, went
-down directly a bird touched them. This for a long time was effectual,
-and I had begun to flatter myself that I had solved the problem, but
-during a hard frost some one or two sparrows overcame their fears and
-managed to get the fat, and when once they saw it might be done with
-safety many others learnt the trick. I then complicated the idea into a
-wheel, with eight arms, and food only at the extreme point of each.
-This answered so far that no sparrow seemed able to get at the fat from
-the revolving arm itself as they hung on to it (an easy feat for the
-tits), but they used to hover opposite the ends of the arms and pick
-out the food. (Robins did this also.) Independently of its effect in
-discouraging the sparrows, the wheel afforded much amusement by the
-antics it imposed upon the tits as they went round and up and down on
-the arms.
-
-One plan I tried depended for its action on the difference of weight
-between a sparrow and a tit. It was the opposite of the arrangement by
-which sparrows are prevented from appropriating the food put out for
-pheasants, where the pheasant opens the corn-box by his weight on the
-perch outside. I tried so to arrange the balance that the heavier
-sparrow was cut off from the hole which contained the food, whilst for
-the tit it remained open. The practical drawback to this plan was the
-nicety of adjustment required, for though a sparrow is more than twice
-the weight of a tom-tit, the difference between the two weights is
-little more than a quarter of an ounce.
-
-One of the most successful contrivances, after all, is one of the
-simplest. Take a tin canister (one that I used was three inches long by
-2-1/2 in diameter), hang it open end downwards by a string brought
-through a hole in the other end, to this string fasten inside the tin a
-bit of wood about the thickness of a large pencil, and let it hang like
-the clapper in a bell, projecting a quarter of an inch below the bottom
-rim of the tin. Plaster all round the inside of the tin with fat,
-leaving the wooden tongue in the middle free for the birds to cling to.
-In this way both great-tits and tom-tits can feed themselves without
-difficulty, but only one sparrow in twenty can manage with much ado to
-hold on and to eat at the same time. (To see a sparrow with his
-less-practised feet clinging to the edge of the tin, back downwards,
-just like a tit and helping himself to its contents is a good example
-of the energetic enterprise and the adaptability of his nature.) Robins
-do sometimes hold on to the tin in the same way, but generally they get
-quite as much as they want by flying up and pecking at the fat. They
-seem able to aim very accurately, and when the tin is nearly empty can
-make sure of the smallest fragments. Sparrows also attack the food in
-the same way by flying up at it, but they seem to find it more awkward,
-owing, perhaps, to the small space between the sides of the tin and the
-wood in the middle, which barely gives room for their larger heads and
-clumsier beaks.
-
-Another successful plan was to suspend the fat within a roll of
-inch-mesh wire netting. To begin with I put this on the food-stand, at
-some little distance from my window, and though at first only tits and
-robins would venture down within the roll of wire, after a time the
-sparrows followed suit, and, of course, there was nothing to prevent
-them getting as much as they liked but their own caution. I might have
-stopped them by covering the top with netting, but then the great-tits
-and robins would have been excluded as well as the sparrows, and even
-tom-tits could only get through the meshes with difficulty. However, I
-moved the roll quite close up to the glass of the window, leaving the
-top still uncovered (and the bottom closed) as before. Tom-tits came to
-it in its new position almost as readily as when on the food-stand.
-Great-tits came but were always rather uneasy about it, but not one
-sparrow ventured to clamber down inside the roll, although it was there
-for more than a year and we had some very hard frosts. They would
-continually try to get at the food from underneath and from the side,
-but could not make up their minds to go inside the roll itself,
-although it was quite open and they had learnt to go in without scruple
-when it was on the food-stand, before it was put close to the window.
-The most fearless of any birds with regard to this wire roll were two
-robins in the beginning of 1902; they were perpetually scrambling up
-and down inside the wire, and continued to do so until April, when the
-supply of food came to end.
-
-The extreme caution of sparrows enables one to scare them away for a
-time by a fluttering ribbon or a bit of paper, but it is only for a
-time; when they see that tits treat such things with contempt and
-venture close to them with impunity they soon summon up courage to lay
-aside their suspicions.
-
-I once put a wire rat-trap under the food-stand, so arranged that it
-went off when a string was pulled. At first, it was baited with corn,
-but while robins and tits went in and out without the least concern,
-not a sparrow would go near, and for a time the presence of the trap
-kept them away from the food-stand altogether. However, they could not
-resist the temptation of bread, and one or two were caught at last. But
-what was the use of catching them? I hadn't the heart to kill them in
-cold blood and used to let them go, and indeed I quite enjoyed myself
-the sense of joyous relief they must have felt as they flew off
-unharmed into the free air.
-
-However much mischief sparrows may do, some good work must be placed to
-their credit. Through a great part of the year, even in February, I
-have seen them flying up after gnats, and it is a common thing in
-summer to see a sparrow in pursuit of a moth. Its efforts always seem
-ridiculously awkward and sometimes I fancy are ineffectual after all,
-but they must commonly succeed or they would not try so often and so
-persistently.
-
-In the spring of 1900 the grass was covered for many days together with
-some kind of little black fly, and sparrows a dozen or so at a time
-with blackbirds, thrushes and chaffinches found a continual feast in
-them. I noticed again and again quite a big round ball of them
-collected and carried away by a thrush.
-
-It has often been noticed that sparrows are more eager than most birds
-in hunting for aphides, and I have seen a sparrow make short work of a
-"daddy-long-legs." In July and August I have watched them catching
-flies on the grass, running after them much as a wagtail does, indeed
-once I remember seeing a sparrow and a wagtail on the lawn at the same
-time, each followed by a young bird whose hunger they were trying to
-satisfy with flies caught in similar fashion.
-
-Impudence is a marked characteristic of a sparrow. I have seen a
-starling at work in his busy, methodical way, closely followed all over
-the lawn by a sparrow. There he was all the time, close at the
-starling's elbow and ready to pounce upon whatever dainty morsel a
-skill superior to his own might bring to light. The starling was
-plainly bored by his company, but the sparrow would take no hint, and
-maintained his position in spite even of pointed rebuffs from the
-other's beak. (In the dry summer of 1911 I noticed at different times
-both a throstle and a blackbird attended in the same way by a sparrow.)
-
-At another time when a starling has arrived with food in its mouth, and
-not daring on account of my being there to take it into its nest, has
-begun, after the usual unwise custom of starlings, loudly to advertise
-the situation, I have seen two sparrows, attracted by the noise he
-made, take up positions one on either side and try to snatch the food
-away from him. I saw this happen twice on two successive days in June,
-1901.
-
-The dusting habit of sparrows must be counted among their many
-iniquities when they indulge in it, as they often do, in a bed of
-newly-sown seeds, but it was strange to see one dusting during the hard
-frost of 1895; one should have thought that they were so out of the way
-of dusting in winter that no sparrow would have taken advantage of the
-rare opportunity when a long dry frost made it possible.
-
-One day in April, 1899, a sparrow that was sitting on the food-stand
-close by my window made quite a song of his chirping. There was a kind
-of modulation of notes, continuously uttered and accompanied by a
-regular "beating time" movement of his tail. On another occasion I have
-heard a sparrow sitting alone on the ridge of a roof, singing, one
-could only call it, quite a little song in subdued tones.
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-FINCHES, STARLINGS AND CROWS.
-
-
-The spruce, handsome chaffinch (in Cheshire "pied finch") is with us
-all the year round, and his song here, as I suppose everywhere, is one
-of the most familiar of the pleasant voices of spring.
-
-One or more chaffinches generally feed with the fowls (and sometimes
-they are quite extraordinarily tame, hens more so, perhaps, than
-cocks), but they do not often attempt to get food from the stand.
-Though they sometimes do, for instance in the winter of 1910-11, there
-was one that came regularly.
-
-The gait of the chaffinch strikes one as peculiar, it is as a fact a
-hopping movement, but it gives the impression of a run.
-
-I have frequently noticed something like rivalry or competition in
-singing between a chaffinch and another bird, such as a tree-pipit or a
-lesser whitethroat, or a willow-wren.
-
-One night as I was going the round of the house the last thing, about
-12 o'clock, I heard a great fluttering and found that a light had been
-left on a table close to an unshuttered window, and outside beating
-against the glass was a handsome cock chaffinch.
-
-In February, 1911, a brambling was brought to me for identification. It
-had been shot at the other side of the village, one of a large flock.
-I have never seen one in the garden itself, but not far away I think I
-caught sight of a small flock in March, 1899.
-
-Far more interesting than stuffed specimens in a museum (how seldom,
-even at South Kensington, do you see small birds well set up, even
-sufficiently well to recognize the bird when met with alive!); far more
-interesting is such an outdoor aviary as one finds near the Town Hall
-in Warrington, where the birds appear to want nothing to make their
-lives ideally happy. In this aviary bramblings seem quite at home, and
-may be seen in best condition of health and feather.
-
-Lesser redpoles, which here they call "jitties," I have seen close to
-the garden, and on the other side of the village they are common. I
-have heard of one boy catching 50 in a season with birdlime; for these
-he got a few pence apiece in Warrington.
-
-A lesser redpole was given me in 1900, and a very engaging little bird
-he was. Though supposed to be freshly caught he was tame when first I
-had him, and in a very short time seemed hardly to know fear.
-
-We used to let him out of his cage every day for an hour or so at a
-time. He enjoyed this immensely, and we had great difficulty in
-shutting him up again. He seemed fond of his cage, and would be
-continually going into it, but directly we went near to shut the door
-he was out. I tried a long string, which we pulled from a distance as
-soon as he was in the cage. This answered for a time, but he got to be
-so knowing that when he saw the string fastened to the door he wouldn't
-go into the cage at all. We got the better of him in the end, however,
-by hanging a bit of card inside the doorway; when he pushed against
-this on the outside he could get by into the cage, but he couldn't open
-it from the inside. We only turned the card in when we wanted him to go
-back, leaving him free to go in and out as he liked till then. Oddly
-enough, he used to go in almost directly the card was in its place, and
-never attempted to get out again. He seemed to enjoy the exercise of
-flying very much, and used to go round and round the room again and
-again and again for the mere pleasure of it.
-
-Though he would settle on the different things in the room and stay
-there for some length of time, there was never any need to clean up
-after him, but on the outside of his cage he was not so particular. It
-was a great amusement to him to sit and make faces at himself in a
-looking-glass.
-
-He lived very happily with us for more than two years. In the end he
-died of some kind of wasting disease, but was bright and apparently
-happy to the last.
-
-For some months before he died, if we let him out at meal-times, as we
-often did, he had a curious habit of going to the salt-cellars and
-helping himself to grains of salt; once he took as many as thirteen
-pinches in succession! We often wondered afterwards whether he took the
-salt because he was ill or whether it was the salt that made him ill.
-
-I would gladly sacrifice many fruit buds for the sake of seeing
-bullfinches in the garden, but never yet have I had that pleasure.
-Other people in the village do not regard their visits in the same
-light, and it is only because I hear of their being shot that I know
-they come here.
-
-A bullfinch that belonged to a cousin must I think have reached the
-highest degree of tameness possible in a bird. Tommy, as he was called,
-was taken from the nest before he could fly, and he not only lost all
-sense of fear but showed an extraordinary personal devotion to his
-mistress. He used to wake her in the morning with a kiss, and warble
-his little greeting. He would come directly she called him, and would
-fly after her from room to room. This devotion was at last the cause of
-his death. In May, 1901, he was taken to London to a strange house, and
-one day hearing his mistress's voice as she came in, he flew down the
-stairs to meet her, and somehow struck against the hall lamp with such
-force that he was taken up dead.
-
-[Illustration: The Two Nests.]
-
-I find the following entry in my diary for November 9th, 1895:--"A
-small flight of birds passed along the trees in front of the window.
-Caught a momentary glance of one as it rested on the tree, and noticed
-shades of brown and pink and the peculiar bill. Could they have been
-crossbills?"
-
-Yellow-hammers, or "goldfinches" as they are called here, are often to
-be seen in the fields near, but in the garden we are more familiar with
-the black-headed reed-bunting. We generally have one or two about the
-old bed of the river. I have watched the bird through a telescope on a
-July day, as he sat on an osier twig that was swaying in the wind,
-preening his feathers and uttering his short melody (?) betweenwhiles.
-He would begin as though he had really something to sing, then would
-come two halting notes, indicating doubt of his power to do much after
-all, which would immediately become a certainty, and his brief attempt
-would end in a fizzle. He would, however, be perfectly satisfied with
-the performance himself, and would go through it again and again almost
-as persistently as the yellow-hammer repeats his wearisome monotonous
-phrase. In the spring he has a still simpler song, if it can be called
-a song, consisting of two or three notes of one tone, something like
-the cheep of a chicken, sometimes repeated _ad infinitum_, sometimes
-followed by a short run of three or four notes more.
-
-We have starlings with us all the year round, and I am glad of it. Here
-at any rate they do nothing but good, and they are, besides, handsome,
-and are interesting to watch, while their song, whether a chorus or a
-solo, is always cheerful. Cold and bad weather doesn't seem to affect
-their spirits. On Christmas morning, in 1897, although there was a hard
-frost, starlings were singing away merrily, one of them imitating a
-blackbird's note exactly.
-
-At one time flocks of starlings used to come on autumn evenings to
-roost in the garden. I have watched one detachment after another arrive
-until the trees and evergreens were crowded with them. They did not
-come so much later on when the leaves had fallen, and now that the
-shrubbery has been thinned they do not come at all in any numbers. In
-spring I have heard 30 or more all singing together in this same
-shrubbery as late as April 2nd.
-
-Starlings hunt for their food in a methodical, business-like way. They
-do not seem to have the peculiar gift by which thrushes hit on the
-exact spot where a worm is (I fancy they do not feed much on worms) but
-they go diligently over every square inch of ground in their search,
-probing the turf with their bills widely open, so widely that one can
-hardly see how they can close them on a grub when they find one.
-
-Starlings afford another example of a strange perversion of instinct or
-want of common sense. If you happen to be standing anywhere near the
-place that one has chosen for his nest, and he arrives with his food in
-his mouth, instead of slipping quietly in whilst your eyes are turned
-away, he waits outside making as much racket as he can, and you are
-almost forced to notice him and cannot fail to see the whereabouts of
-his nest, plainly marked as it is sure to be by plentiful splashes of
-white.
-
-It is quite a common thing in spring and summer to see starlings
-catching flies in the air, and I remember in 1906, on September 29th,
-the air was, one might say, full of starlings, floating about in every
-direction with expanded wings, and then shooting up or down or to one
-side when they came within reach of a fly. It was a warm, still day,
-and I fancy the flies they were catching were winged aphides.
-
-For many years now as soon as the elder-berries are ripe numbers of
-starlings, chiefly young ones, arrive on the scene, and in a few days
-clear them off completely.
-
-Jays are not common here, but we have occasionally watched one in the
-garden as he was looking for fallen acorns in the grass close to the
-house.
-
-One may pretty safely count on seeing a magpie near Arley at any time
-of the year, and we do at long intervals see them in this garden and
-in the fields near, but they are very far from common.
-
-I have heard of a magpie at a farm in the next village to this, many
-years ago indeed, who kept his eye on a turkey that was in the habit of
-laying eggs at a little distance from the house, and often managed to
-appropriate the newly-laid egg before the farm people could stop him.
-
-Jackdaws are often about, generally in company with rooks, but I have
-never specially noticed them settling in the garden, as the rooks often
-do.
-
-In Wales once I saw a jackdaw busily engaged exploring the back of a
-pony with its beak. The pony continued quietly grazing all the while,
-but I thought he seemed rather relieved when his visitor left.
-
-In January, 1898, two crows appeared in the garden; I used to see them
-nearly every evening. A month later we saw a single crow, injured in
-one wing, go backwards and forwards over the whole length of the
-opposite bank. Up and down he went, regularly quartering the ground in
-his search for food. He did this for several days, and we felt quite
-sorry for him, he was so diligent and persevering, and it must have
-been so little that he could find within such comparatively narrow
-limits. We put food for him, which he soon found and seemed to
-appreciate. He drove away rooks who tried to share it with him, but as
-he carried away each bit to eat in private the rooks took advantage of
-his absence, and the supply did not last as long as it might have done.
-
-The poor bird was uncommonly wary: he would spy one out hundreds of
-yards away and disappear in a wonderful manner, seeing that he could
-not fly. At last some Ship Canal workmen caught him. I got him from
-them and kept him for three months, but though he ate pretty well it
-did not seem to do him much good, and he never became in the least tame
-to the day of his death.
-
-We have often hoped that rooks would build in the garden; they come
-sometimes to the higher trees as though they had thoughts of doing so,
-but they have not gone beyond that as yet. In some years when acorns
-are ripe many rooks come here to get them (in 1911, although acorns
-were extraordinarily abundant, I hardly saw a single rook). I have
-never seen them pick up the acorns on the ground, as the jays and
-wood-pigeons do, but they gather them fresh for themselves from the
-tree.
-
-More than once I have seen a single rook pursuing a hawk, and, on the
-other hand, I have seen a rook put to flight by a missel-thrush.
-
-Rather a strange story was told me of a farmer's daughter at Heatley,
-near here. She lived by herself not far from the railway station, and
-every day, summer and winter alike, she fed a number of rooks that
-habitually waited on her bounty. One winter's day, it appears, she
-threw down food for a few rooks that were in a tree behind her house.
-The next day they were there again, and again she fed them, and so it
-grew into a regular thing, and they came expecting to be fed like so
-many fowls every day of the year. My informant often watched the
-proceeding, and said that the birds seemed to know their benefactress
-quite well and not to be at all afraid of her, though they were as shy
-of strangers as any other rooks.
-
-Skylarks are abundant in the neighbourhood, and often in the garden we
-hear one singing overhead. I have seen a lark singing his regular song
-on the ground, and have seen one perched on iron railings by the side
-of a road holding a largish brown moth in its bill, and at the same
-time uttering repeatedly two or three notes of its song.
-
-Larks are very fond of dusting in roads. I remember being struck one
-hot day in June by the number of dusting larks I met with in a ten-mile
-ride. Without any exaggeration there must have been one every twenty
-yards on an average for the whole distance.
-
-
-
-
-IX.
-
-OTHER BIRDS.
-
-
-The wild shriek of swifts, as they dash and wheel through the air at
-their topmost speed, seems to express such intense delight in freedom
-and motion and power, that it imparts something of the same sense of
-exhilaration to the beholder, at least, I know it is so with me.
-
-Swifts, or "long-wings," as they are equally well-named in Cheshire,
-usually find their food at some height in the air, but one day in the
-beginning of July (1899) I noticed a number of swifts, with a great
-many swallows and sand-martins, skimming the surface of a patch of
-clover which had been left standing in a field near the garden. I did
-not discover what it was, but the attraction must have been something
-unusual, for the number of birds passing and re-passing in the very
-small space was so extraordinary that it was really difficult to
-understand how they could avoid collision. All were concentrated in the
-one spot, and never seemed to go beyond it for more than a couple of
-yards.
-
-In 1896 there were swifts about all August, and I saw a pair on October
-19th. I was told by a friend who was at Brighton in June, 1899, that
-whenever the band played on the sea front four swifts would appear and
-fly round and round the bandstand. She never noticed them there, she
-said, when the band was not playing, although it was her favourite seat
-at all times of the day.
-
-Nightjars are not uncommon on "mosses" in Lancashire, only a mile or so
-away, and in Cheshire on the Carrington side of Warburton, but they are
-less frequent just about here. One year, however (1902), a pair
-evidently had made their nest in the rough tussocky ground which at
-that time covered the bed of the old river. From the middle of June to
-the beginning of July we were treated every evening to the full
-programme of their entertainment, both vocal and acrobatic. Several
-times one heard little snatches of the "song," even in the middle of
-the day in fine, hot weather, but nine p.m., sometimes a little
-earlier, was the usual time for beginning. The whirring would go on for
-an hour at a time, with hardly any cessation, but often varying in tone
-and volume, now swelling out louder and then sinking again. We often
-saw the two birds playing about together in the air, one or other of
-them making what is described as a "whipthong" noise and smiting its
-wings together like a pigeon. Sometimes when they first settled again
-after a flight, instead of the loud whirring there would be every now
-and then a soft, liquid, bubbling sound.
-
-A favourite resting-place was the bare bough of a Scotch fir, and here
-as it lay lengthways and perfectly still the bird looked so like part
-of the branch itself that I couldn't persuade a friend who was with me
-that it was a bird until he actually saw it fly away. After July 4th we
-heard no more of them, and for a day or two before that the whirring
-was much more interrupted, in shorter spells, and varied more in
-intensity and clearness than usual.
-
-Before the next spring came round the Ship Canal had covered the
-river-bed with another layer of mud dredgings, and we have neither seen
-nor heard a nightjar in the garden since, but in June, 1910, I heard
-from the keeper that he had watched one flying round an old
-black-poplar just opposite the garden gate, flapping the ends of the
-boughs with his wings and catching the moths that were driven out.
-
-One of the most delightful of country sounds is, I think, the laugh of
-the green woodpecker, and when I heard that a pair of woodpeckers were
-constantly to be seen (January and February, 1901) about some old
-poplars not far away, and that early one morning one was working at the
-rotten posts of a fence in the very next field, my hopes were raised
-that even yet that welcome sound might be heard from the garden. But
-the birds turned out to be greater-spotted woodpeckers and not green,
-and these do not express the joy of living so plainly. I have several
-times since seen one of these spotted woodpeckers in the garden. One
-day (in April, 1908) I watched the bird for a long time as he visited
-in succession each of the posts in a wire fence by the old river-bed.
-
-Green woodpeckers are rare in this part of the country, but
-"lesser-spotted" are found in Dunham Park, and the keeper tells me he
-has seen them in Warburton Fox-cover.
-
-In the low-lying meadows by the Bollin, half a mile away, kingfishers
-have always been found, haunting the little water-courses and ditches,
-but at one time we were able to see them even from the garden itself.
-
-In the making of the Ship Canal a part of the old river just beyond us
-was left unfilled up, and formed a fair-sized pool. Kingfishers used to
-come to this, and as long as there was any water at all in the old
-river-bed I often stood outside this house and watched the blue streak
-of light as the bird, with his peculiar shrill cry, flew straight as an
-arrow past me. Even in August, 1899, when what remained of the river
-was nothing but seething mud, in which I am sure there could have been
-no living fish, I disturbed a kingfisher from an overhanging branch on
-the bank.
-
-A friend in the village, a keen observer of birds, has often seen, he
-tells me, that when kingfishers fly from the meadows to the "pits" on
-higher ground they first rise straight up into the air and then dart
-off in a perfect bee-line to their destination. He also said that
-kingfishers invariably desert a nest that has been touched. He was
-repairing the embankment of the Bollin once when a kingfisher's nest
-was accidentally laid open, and although the nest itself was not
-injured, and the two young ones in it were nearly fledged and fought at
-his hand like little owls, when two days later he was at the place
-again he found them both dead, unable to find food for themselves and
-forsaken by their parents.
-
-The coming of the cuckoo seems to be of more interest to people here
-than any event in natural history, and cuckoos are, I should say, more
-plentiful with us than in many places, and are nearly as often seen as
-heard.
-
-I must have seen a dozen one day in May from the high road during a
-short drive of a few miles, and, generally speaking, in May not a day
-(I should not be far out if I said not an hour of the day) goes by
-without our knowing by sight as well as sound that there are cuckoos in
-the garden.
-
-The widespread belief that cuckoos turn into hawks in winter is still
-seriously held in Cheshire to-day, even by farmers.
-
-For three days in the end of July, 1905, I was able from my study
-window to watch a young cuckoo being fed by its foster-parent, a
-meadow-pipit. The cuckoo was sitting on a wire fence on the opposite
-bank. At first it sat in a floppy kind of way, with its wings hanging
-down on either side, as if to keep its balance, but the next day it
-seemed to have gained strength and sat up better. The little pipit (if
-it was always the same, and I never saw more than one at once) was not
-away for more than a minute or two, except on the third day, when it
-was pouring wet and food seemed harder to find. As soon as the cuckoo
-knew that its nurse was coming it began opening its mouth and quivering
-its wings, while the poor little dupe that brought the food would
-alight a short distance off and run along the wire to its side, then,
-looking ridiculously small for the job, it would manage to pop
-something into its mouth, not all in one go, but in two or three. It
-was curious to notice that every time after being fed the ungrateful
-cuckoo gave spiteful pecks at the poor deluded little slave who was
-working so hard to supply its wants.
-
-One day in May (1908) a cuckoo alighted on a tree close to the house,
-attended by two small birds. He seemed rather uneasy in their company,
-and kept looking suspiciously at them; they, I fancy, were trying to
-make up their minds to attack him, but they let "I dare not" wait so
-long upon "I would" that he went off unmolested.
-
-Barn owls are comparatively common. Farmers are learning to understand
-better their great usefulness, and at least to leave them alone. Some,
-indeed, do more than this, and I know of two cases where the pigeon
-cote in the hay-loft has been given up to them. Through the back door
-of one of these cotes I have been able to see at my ease the funny
-little round-faced hissing young ones, and I was quite surprised to
-find how very long it is before the fully-fledged birds turn out of the
-nest. My friend at Heatley was one of those who entertained the owls,
-and he told me that if an old bird accidentally dropped a mouse as he
-made his way into the loft, he never by any chance attempted to recover
-it. He said he used on winter evenings to see the owls fly along the
-eaves of the neighbouring houses and inside the roof of a hayshed close
-by, beating with their wings to drive out the sparrows that were
-roosting there, and he found the remains of a great many sparrows in
-their casts.
-
-A barn-owl appeared in the garden one day in May, 1899. It did all it
-could to hide itself in the bushes and thick Scotch firs, but in spite
-of its efforts the birds in the neighbourhood, led on apparently by the
-blackbirds, found it out again and again, and kept up a ceaseless noise
-and commotion as long as it was here. (I noticed that the fowls, both
-cocks and hens, joined in the general clamour.) In December, however, I
-have seen an owl fly into one of the out-houses in the middle of the
-day, and even sit calmly in full view on a leafless tree without
-attracting the least notice from any bird.
-
-The keeper tells me that brown, long-eared, and short-eared owls are
-all to be found in Warburton at times, brown owls nesting here
-regularly.
-
-Sparrow hawks come to us occasionally, but not so often as kestrels.
-The difference in the behaviour of small birds with regard to these two
-hawks is remarkable, and plainly shows that they have, as a rule,
-little to fear from kestrels. One November day, for instance, a sparrow
-hawk appeared in a tree just opposite my window, causing the greatest
-commotion and consternation among sparrows and all other birds. A week
-later a kestrel came to the same place at the same time of the day and
-stayed about for a considerable time, but none of the small birds took
-the least notice of him.
-
-My friend at Heatley, who used to have the owls as his tenants, once
-(in 1897) shot a sparrow hawk near his house that had a screaming
-blackbird in his talons, and was tearing off from its back strips of
-feathers and flesh together without apparently having tried to kill it
-first. He told me that twice he had seen a lark escape from a sparrow
-hawk. In both instances the lark's idea seemed to be to rise higher
-than the hawk, and the two kept going up together. The hawk made
-repeated stoops at his quarry, but each time he missed, the lark
-striking now to the right and now to the left. The contest ended in
-both cases by the lark dashing down to cover from a great height; one
-time it found refuge among the shrubs in a garden, and on the second
-occasion it came down faster than he could describe with its wings
-closed against its sides, and just slanting over the tops of some fruit
-trees opposite, dashed straight into the kitchen. To do this it had to
-pass through the sliding door of the back-kitchen, which was not more
-than two feet open, and then through the open door of the kitchen.
-Strange to say, it was able to check its speed sufficiently to alight
-uninjured on the floor, though utterly exhausted and helpless. My
-friend picked it up, and having held it for some minutes in his hand,
-let it fly away seeming none the worse for its perilous adventure. The
-hawk, he said, sailed calmly once or twice round the house before he
-took himself off.
-
-The following is part of a letter I received in November, 1894:--"A
-sparrow hawk took up his nightly abode on the transome of the top light
-of a window in Arley Chapel in the autumn of 1890, and remained
-constant to that roosting place until, at all events, May, 1892, when
-we left Arley. How long it stayed there after we left I cannot say, but
-I was told last winter that it had disappeared. The hawk was always
-solitary; I never saw it with a companion. The roost was always exactly
-on the same stone."
-
-One has heard stories of other birds living the same kind of lonely
-existence, but I never saw a very satisfactory explanation as to how it
-is that they come to do so. The pairing instinct is strong in birds,
-and it must be a powerful motive that makes them disregard it. We are
-told that if a bird of prey loses its mate it does not take it long to
-find another. May we suppose that solitary birds like this at Arley are
-waiting in readiness for such an emergency? Or is such a bird simply
-one that, being old and cantankerous, is bored by female society, or
-feels himself unequal to the cares of a family?
-
-All birds seem to give a sparrow hawk a wide berth, but one often sees
-a kestrel pursued, most frequently perhaps by a rook, but sometimes by
-a peewit or a gull. In October, 1908, I saw from the garden a kestrel
-persecuted by two rooks. He kept dodging their attacks, but didn't seem
-to mind them much and never turned on them. Again, at the end of
-October, 1906, I was watching a kestrel as it hovered over a field
-close by, when I saw it suddenly and violently assaulted by a
-missel-thrush. It gave way for some space, but when in a minute or two
-the thrush flew off, it returned to its first position and continued
-hovering just as if never interrupted.
-
-[Illustration: The Food Stand.]
-
-I have heard from a man here, an old gamekeeper, a story like one that
-I have read somewhere before. He had seen a kestrel pounce upon what he
-supposed to be a mouse and fly off with it. Presently, to his surprise,
-it fell like a stone to the ground and he picked it up quite dead;
-close by it he found a dead stoat.
-
-Wild duck breed in the Bollin meadows and may sometimes be seen in the
-garden as they fly over; we see wild geese, too, sometimes, and
-occasionally a heron. I was much struck one day by the flight of a pair
-of swans over the garden. They were not flying high, but side by side,
-with their long necks stretched out, with strong regular wing-beats;
-without haste and without effort, they held on their straight and even
-course at a good steady pace. It gave me rather a strange impression of
-dignity and power.
-
-One or two pairs of wood-pigeons build in the garden every year, but
-they are not as common in Warburton as in more wooded country, though
-sometimes large flocks visit us in autumn (_e.g._, in 1910). My friend
-at Heatley told me that one year when a great many had come to feed on
-acorns in a wood near his house, he had hoped from the shelter of a
-wooden hut to make a good bag, but he found that in spite of their
-numbers they were extremely wideawake, and though they covered the
-ground in every other direction, they carefully eschewed a trail of
-Indian corn, with which he had hoped to tempt them within reach of his
-gun.
-
-Turtledoves are fairly common in Cheshire, but there are many more in
-some years than in others. I only remember their nesting in this garden
-once (in 1899), when they were to be seen on the lawn every day.
-
-Pheasants are constant visitors; we are very seldom without them at any
-time of the year, and since parts of the old river-bed have been left
-wild they have taken to breeding here. We have often watched from our
-window the cock pheasant strutting about the hen, ruffling up his
-feathers and displaying himself to advantage like a turkey-cock. The
-tufts of ear-like feathers on each side of the head are a marked
-feature in the cock at the courting season and give the bird a curious
-Mephistophelian look.
-
-We noticed once when we came upon them unawares as they were feeding on
-corn we had put for them, that the hen, instead of scuttling off like
-the cock, clapped close to the ground almost within arm's length,
-evidently trusting for concealment to her sober colouring.
-
-One cock who made himself very much at home here in the early part of
-1901, and stayed with us for more than three months, unlike most that
-have been here, was for ever crowing and clapping his wings. He always
-roosted on the same tree, and every evening just before it got dark
-took care to let us know that he was going to bed.
-
-In October, 1910, there was a cock that used to amuse himself by
-sitting for half an hour at a time on the broad top of a clipped yew
-hedge. Several hens would sometimes sit there with him: once we saw
-seven on the top of the hedge at once.
-
-I have heard that in Japan at the time of an earthquake, extraordinary
-commotion is noticed among pheasants. There was a slight shock of
-earthquake here on December 17th, 1896, at 5-30 in the morning, and a
-working man who happened then to be near the Fox-cover was especially
-struck by the noise that pheasants were making in the wood.
-
-Nearly every year we have partridge visitors, a family party; in 1895
-there were thirteen young ones with the old pair, and last year, 1911,
-again there were twelve. They always seem happy and light-hearted; they
-dance and jump, they play games like "hide-and-seek" or
-"kiss-in-the-ring," round about and in and out the drooping feathery
-branches of a deadara, that just touch the ground, and in the intervals
-they sun themselves on the walks.
-
-I heard very few corncrakes in 1911, but they are common enough most
-years. In 1908, one took up his abode in the old river-bed just outside
-our window, and used to serenade us every night (May 8th to 26th). He
-went on incessantly, exactly like a clock, quite regularly and evenly.
-He was at it when we went to bed about 12 and never ceased or varied in
-the least as long as we were awake to hear him.
-
-What was once the bed of the Mersey has now (1912), thanks to the Ship
-Canal engineers, become land comparatively speaking dry. But, of
-course, the process of filling up was gradual, and for some years more
-or less water was left in the river-bed. During one stage, which lasted
-perhaps ten years, waterhens, which here are known as coots (true coots
-are called "baldheaded"), became quite common in the garden. We used to
-see them rather as waders than swimmers, but we did constantly see them
-running about on the soft mud, washing in the little pools, and, as
-pairing time came on, fighting desperately together. In the autumn a
-dozen or more would be feeding on the lawn at once, and in the winter
-some would often come to pick up food with the fowls, I have even seen
-one make an attempt to get fat from a net hung out for the tits. We
-often saw them perching quite high up in a tree. In 1907, I had a
-photograph given me showing a waterhen's nest in a small wood near
-Lymm. It was in a tree four feet six inches from the ground, and 200
-yards from any water.
-
-Golden plover come to the Bollin meadows every winter, but not so many
-I think as when the land was more liable to floods, at least I do not
-hear their clear whistle as often as formerly. It is not unusual to see
-them flocking with peewits.
-
-Peewits are called simply "plover" here. There are large flocks on
-every side though not actually in the garden.
-
-In August 1897, there was an extraordinary concourse of peewits on the
-bank of the river just opposite. The noise they made was loud and
-continuous, and birds were flying backwards and forwards all the while.
-The whole of the bank for a hundred yards or more was covered with
-them, others were at the water's edge, washing like ducks or playing
-about and chasing one another, others were picking among the stones or
-drinking. All the time the noise never ceased, and a friend said it
-reminded her of the gulls on the coast of Ireland that she heard on her
-way to America. The assembly on that particular day (August 13th) broke
-up about one p.m., having lasted for more than an hour. Frequently
-during the rest of the month, peewits gathered at the same place, but
-not in the same numbers, and one day in December, 1898, I noticed that
-there was something of the same kind on a small scale going on.
-
-In June, 1901, when the river-bed had been further filled up and the
-pools transformed into a muddy swamp, we were able from our windows to
-watch a brood of peewit chicks from the time when they were first
-hatched until they were old enough to go out into the world. They were
-most interesting when as quite little things with backs the colour of
-the eggs they had left, they busily hunted about for food, or all
-crowded together under the wings of their mother for short spells of
-rest and warmth.
-
-Snipe breed in the Bollin meadows, and common sandpipers were always by
-the river and the river-bed as long as there was any water at all in
-it, always at least in August. They still seem to remember their old
-haunts, and visit us occasionally. In the latter part of August, 1910,
-there was one that had some feathers out of place in one of its wings
-and appeared unable to fly. He seemed content enough and I wondered if
-he would try to face the winter here, but whether by his own act and
-deed, or by someone else's, he had gone when I looked for him in
-September. In August, 1911, a sandpiper used to frequent a pit in
-fields a good way from the river.
-
-In April and May, 1910, a pair of redshanks were constantly to be seen
-in the Bollin meadows towards Dunham, but no nest was found. In 1911
-they were there again, and the keeper found a nest not far from the
-Fox-cover, but I think he must have told too many of his friends about
-it, for within a week of the eggs being hatched it was deserted.
-
-I very well remember a good many years ago, though I can find no note
-of the exact year, that I saw a black tern flying backwards and
-forwards like a swallow over a wet spot in the corner of the garden,
-and the next day I saw what was probably the same bird flying in the
-same way over a large farmyard pit close by the road, about a mile from
-here.
-
-Since the Ship Canal has been opened gulls have been among the most
-frequent and the most noticeable of all birds in these parts. Whenever
-a field is ploughed up, however far it may be from the canal, there you
-are sure to find gulls, and when the plough is at work in the fields
-opposite, which are close to its banks, the gulls come in crowds and
-form one long white line as the furrows are turned, the birds
-continually rising before the plough and settling down again when it
-has passed. I have identified black-headed and lesser black-backed
-gulls among them, but have never attempted to decide to what species
-the majority belong. Indeed, I do not feel very competent to do so,
-having always found it sufficiently difficult to distinguish the
-variations of gull plumage at different ages and at different times of
-the year.
-
-In 1908 the keeper (Mr. J. Porter) showed me a Bohemian waxwing, a
-hooded crow and a hobby, all of which he had shot in Warburton within a
-year or two previously.
-
-He has told me since of stockdoves ("blue rocks" he calls them) nesting
-here, and a curious story of a wren's nest on an ash-stump in the
-Fox-cover in 1910, on the top of which a hedgesparrow built her nest.
-Both broods, he said, hatched about the same time.
-
-I have received from a friend in Northamptonshire (Mr. G. S. Garrett,
-of Little Houghton) a photograph showing a similar instance of two
-nests built one above the other. He says: "A piece of bark about 20
-inches by 13, fell off an elm tree into a fence and dried up into a
-tube-like shape. A spotted flycatcher built its nest in the top and
-laid 5 eggs and a brown wren in the bottom laying 7 eggs.... The nests
-are now in the Rochester Museum."
-
-
-
-
-X.
-
-BRITISH MAMMALS.
-
-
-The whole extent of the garden, with its croft and orchard, is not
-three acres, but a fair proportion of the British mammals are from time
-to time to be found there.
-
-The old church, largely built of timber, picturesque and quaint, stands
-within a few yards of the house and its roof affords shelter to many
-bats. We find the wings of moths, the remnants of their feasts,
-scattered on the floor (I have noticed the wings of a tortoise-shell
-butterfly among them), and I have found there more than one dead body
-of a common bat; I cannot say whether that is the only kind we have,
-but in 1908 a bat was seen near the house which, from the description
-given of its size and manner of flight, may perhaps have been a
-noctule.
-
-On May 28th, 1899, there was an eclipse of the sun; it was only
-partial, and made very little difference to the light, but just so long
-as it lasted, from 3 to 4.30 p.m., I saw a bat flying busily round and
-about the church.
-
-The soil is light and worms seem to be abundant, but one hardly ever
-sees a mole-hill in this part of Cheshire. One day, however, in
-December, 1899, we noticed that a bed of parsley had withered in a
-mysterious way, and when we came to look, the ground was quite
-undermined with mole-runs. These were very shallow, and there was no
-sign of a hillock above. Many of the roots of the parsley had been
-entirely eaten off, and we saw that nearly all that remained in the bed
-were full of grubs. These grubs it must have been, I suppose, that
-attracted the mole, but it is curious that such an exceptional
-condition of the roots should have been discovered, considering how
-seldom there is any sign of a mole in the neighbourhood. We noticed
-that the root of a strong raspberry cane on one side of the parsley bed
-had been eaten off in the same way, but it is not very likely that this
-would have had grubs in it.
-
-Hedgehogs are not uncommon and we sometimes see them in broad daylight.
-In July one year (1900) every evening for about a week we used to see a
-large hedgehog running along a broad gravel walk close to the windows
-of the house. It came always at the same time, "just at the edge of
-dark," as they say here, and it always took the same route and
-disappeared at the same place.
-
-Later on in the month we found a young one, a most delightful little
-animal, as friendly and tame as possible. We used to feed him with milk
-every day as long as he stayed here, which was about a week, and once
-when we expected some boys in the garden we brought him into the house
-and put him in a box. He strongly objected to the imprisonment, loudly
-protesting all the time in a voice like the squeaking of a rat, and it
-was surprising to see how nearly he managed to get out, though the
-sides of the box were almost two feet high.
-
-Stoats, commonly called weasels with us, were fairly common when we had
-more rats and rabbits, but we do not often see one now (1912). We had a
-white terrier that killed several, though I had an idea that dogs
-looked on stoats as a kind of ferret and did not hurt them.
-
-We can count a fox among our occasional visitors. I have watched one
-for some time that was smelling about among the shrubs just opposite to
-the front door about eight o'clock on a Sunday morning.
-
-We are out of the regular beat of the Cheshire Hounds here, and I fancy
-the secret slaying of a fox is not accounted a very heinous crime,
-certainly the foxes that are often reported soon disappear. In 1899 a
-fox had its "earth" in the Abbey Croft, a field next to the garden, and
-we used to like to hear him barking in the still summer evenings. In
-the end, however, the keepers were too many for him, and he had to
-shift his quarters or else it may have been his lease of life ran out.
-
-We suffered very much at one time from the plague of rats. They
-infested the out-buildings and the house itself, and for a long while
-we were in despair about them. We tried poison, with the result that
-dead rats made the kitchen uninhabitable and entailed the expense and
-nuisance of taking up the floor, and still they came. We tried every
-kind of trap, we had the whole of the outside walls examined, and every
-possible entrance hole stopped, so at least we thought, but still they
-came. At last we found that the simple expedient of doing away with the
-ashpit deprived the premises of their chief attraction in a rat's eyes,
-for then we had to burn on the kitchen fire all the vegetable and other
-refuse that formerly found its way to the ashpit, and provided such
-abundant and appetizing food. Certain it is that since we did this,
-more than twelve years ago now (1912), we never have had a rat in the
-house.
-
-I have heard of large young fowls being killed by rats at farms not far
-away, but I do not remember that they ever took one of our chickens;
-indeed, at a time when we used to see many rats there, a hen sat in the
-stable and safely hatched her chicks. I recollect an old rat that used
-to come every day to feed with the fowls without any objection to his
-presence on their part.
-
-Rabbits were another great nuisance. They had burrows among the
-tree-roots on the river bank and no one seemed able to get them out or
-to shoot them, so between what they ate and what they dug up, we
-hadn't much pleasure in the garden. At last we cut off so much of the
-garden as we could surround with wire netting and left the rest to take
-its chance. No sooner had we done this than, for what reason I cannot
-tell, the rabbits disappeared completely, and for two or three years we
-hardly ever saw one on our own ground, though they seemed to be as
-plentiful as usual elsewhere.
-
-We have sometimes caught long-tailed field-mice that were eating the
-peas, and the cats seemed to find voles and shrews pretty often.
-
-I must confess to rather a weakness for common mice; they are pretty to
-look at and amusing in their ways. To give an instance of their
-ingenuity and enterprise, I remember some time in the summer of 1899,
-when we used to have a basin of sugar left in our room at night, a
-certain mouse appeared to think that it was placed there for his own
-special benefit, at any rate he was accustomed to help himself very
-freely to it. We could hear him working away to get a lump over the
-side of the basin, then rolling it along to the edge of the table and
-letting it fall to the floor, along which he would again roll it to a
-hole under the skirting-board. Sometimes he would take in this way as
-many as three or four lumps of sugar in one night. Besides the sugar
-there was often bread and butter left in the room between two plates,
-and one morning when I took the top one off out jumped the mouse. I
-cannot imagine how it got in. It certainly couldn't make its way out
-again, which one should have thought a far easier thing to do. The
-plates seemed to be exactly as I had left them the night before, and I
-could not see that any of the bread and butter had been eaten.
-
-I remember what seems to me an extraordinary instance of a mouse's
-power of smelling out food. In the new parish church here (consecrated
-in 1885) the vestry is in the tower, and its ceiling, which is the
-floor of the bellringing-room, must be nearly 20 ft. from the ground.
-Just under this ceiling were suspended at one time three very long
-texts; they were drawn up by pulleys with a rope that was fastened off
-about six feet from the floor. One of these texts was used at harvest
-festivals, and a fringe of corn had been left round the border, but all
-three were elaborately done up together in brown paper, so that none of
-the corn could be seen. Happening to be at the church one day I found
-the caretaker had brought out these texts into the churchyard, because
-he had seen, he said, a mouse running up to them by the suspending
-cord. Sure enough, when he undid the wrapping the poor little thing was
-there, and I am sorry to say was promptly killed. I thought its
-wonderful cleverness deserved a better fate. The church was newly
-built with concrete floors, and there was no regular food supply to
-attract mice, so this particular mouse must have come in casually on
-the mere chance of picking up something, and it must from the floor,
-nearly 20 ft. below, have found out that there was corn in one of the
-bundles of texts behind the brown paper that covered them, and I think
-more wonderful still, it must have discovered the only way of reaching
-it, along the suspending cord.
-
-There used to be an old piano in the Parish Room close to the new
-church. This was not often used and one day when we lifted the cover
-from the back part of the keyboard we found snugly placed in a corner
-of the bass notes an empty mouse's nest, quite round like a bird's, and
-beautifully made of dried bits of grass and coloured worsted. It seems
-strange that a mouse should have found such a place for its nest, and
-stranger still that in a new large bare room, with a solid wood-block
-floor, it should have been able unobserved to go in and out continually
-to fetch the materials for it. This it must have done, since none came
-from the room itself.
-
-The long broad garden walk by the side of the house seems to be a
-favourite thoroughfare for hares; we constantly see them passing at all
-times of the year. I wish myself there were not quite so many hares in
-Warburton as there are. We could do very well with fewer in the gardens
-and orchards, and there would then be less inducement to hold such
-frequent public coursing meetings, which, in my opinion, we could do
-very well without. Some years before 1900 a large number were imported
-and turned down. These were at first a great annoyance to everybody,
-and did much damage to fruit trees even in mild open weather; it was
-almost unbelievable the height to which they could reach, gnawing off
-every bit of bark all the way round. They were, besides, far too thick
-upon the ground for their own comfort. I was told by a man who worked
-on the estate that he often came across bucks fighting together; they
-fought so savagely, he said, that they would hardly get out of his way,
-and almost knocked up against him. They begin fighting, it appears from
-his account, by giving slaps with their forefeet, but in the end they
-go on to worry at one another like dogs.
-
-
-
-
-XI.
-
-DOGS AND CATS.
-
-
-It is hard to say which is the most wonderful, to see how a dog's
-intelligence can be developed by companionship with man or to look at a
-Great Dane and a toy terrier together, and to remember that both breeds
-have by man's agency been produced from the same original stock.
-
-Cats, on the other hand, have never left their wild nature far behind,
-and can easily return to it, as indeed they often do. Dogs are almost
-entirely dependent on their human friends, but most cats do something
-for their living, and some without going wild will find all their own
-food. I remember one cat in particular that did this; she was an old
-cat when first I came, and lived on with me for more than fourteen
-years. As long as she was strong and able to hunt she never came into
-the house and never asked for food (she was tame enough when she met us
-out of doors) it was only when she got to be old and feeble that she
-turned to us and learnt to value the warmth of a fireside. She must
-have been 20, and may well have been nearer 25 when she died, and her
-great age showed itself plainly by every outward sign. In her prime she
-was a large, handsome animal, but she dwindled down to absolute skin
-and bone literally; her face lost all its roundness and got to be quite
-small and her voice died almost completely away. Towards the last she
-spent her days on one particular stool by the fire, eating very little,
-but apparently content and even happy, and responding as best as she
-could to any attention. I do not remember her ever lying down at that
-time, she was always sitting and always on the same spot, which was
-worn quite shiny in consequence. At last one day she failed to appear,
-and we never found her body.
-
-The oddest cat we ever had was a black one that came to us of her own
-accord in 1881. She had such a vile temper and was altogether so
-uncanny that she might well have been possessed by an evil spirit.
-
-When she had been with us only a few days, I found her hanging on to
-the wire-netting of an outhouse door, evidently trying to get some
-pigeons that she could see behind it. Very soon afterwards another cat
-was drowned for persistently taking pigeons, and it really seemed as if
-Blacky understood, for never after that did she look at a pigeon with
-evil intent; she would walk through a number of them as they fed on the
-ground, and so little did they fear her that they hardly moved out of
-her way.
-
-We had a canary once (and we must have had him for more than 10 years),
-whose noisy song was so distracting that we used sometimes to put him
-down on a table and cover his cage with a cloth. One day we went out
-and left him there, and must have forgotten to shut the room door, for
-when we came back we found the cover off the cage and the cat curled up
-fast asleep by the side of it. The canary was unharmed and didn't
-appear to be even frightened; he was hopping about in his cage quite
-content and at ease. That the cat should have pulled off the cover and
-then have left the bird alone seemed the more astonishing, because she
-was a hardened and incurable thief.
-
-Blacky knew the time for afternoon tea, and was always there to the
-minute. However, when something that came to her brought off all her
-hair and made her a pitiable object, she seemed to know of herself that
-she was not presentable, and though we did nothing to prevent her she
-never came into the drawing-room again until her hair had grown; then
-she appeared regularly as before.
-
-There may be some truth in the old saying, "Dogs care for people and
-cats for places," but individuals differ very much; great love of home
-is often seen in dogs, and strong personal affection in cats.
-
-A cat was born here in 1897 and lived with us for two years like any
-other cat. She was indeed rather more intelligent than many. She had
-evidently observed the manner of opening a door, for when she wanted to
-get into a room she used to rattle at the handle. One day she came and
-rattled at the door-handle of the study where I was sitting, but
-instead of coming in when the door was opened, she led me to the
-drawing-room, and standing up put her paw on the handle of the door: as
-plainly as possible she had fetched me to let her in.
-
-Now although this cat was made a great deal of with us and seemed to
-have a strong personal affection for me, spending most of her time with
-me, one fine day she took herself off and disappeared altogether.
-
-As weeks went by and we heard nothing of her we concluded she had met
-with the fate to which pitiless game preservation has consigned many
-another cat. But after about three months I saw her in the garden, when
-though she followed me she refused to be touched. For weeks again we
-never set eyes on her, and we almost came to believe that it was her
-wraith I had seen. At last I happened to notice her sitting outside a
-cottage not 200 yards from this house, by which I passed almost every
-day of my life, but though she looked up when I called her by name she
-would not come to me. After a year or two she very frequently came into
-the garden and was willing enough to be stroked, but she never entered
-this house again until (in 1909) the old man at the cottage died, and
-the home she had chosen for herself was broken up. Then of her own
-accord she returned to us as a matter of course, and up to the day of
-her death (in November, 1911) was as friendly and affectionate as
-possible.
-
-It is odd that a cat should thus deliberately have chosen to leave a
-home that was her birthplace, and where she had been more than kindly
-treated. We thought at the time that it might have been through
-jealousy of her own kitten, that she often found in the study, but if
-of so jealous a disposition, why should she go to be one of a family of
-cats in which as the last-comer she could hardly hope to take the first
-place?
-
-The man she went to sometimes worked here, and as he was fond of cats
-might have taken a fancy to this one, and possibly did something to
-entice her away. If this was so, it is clear that a cat's affection is
-not always for places rather than people.
-
-The strangest part of it all is to me not that she should have left us
-for the cottage, but that at the same time her whole behaviour towards
-us should have so entirely changed that she wouldn't let us touch her,
-and couldn't be induced to set foot in the house.
-
-The old man to whom this cat betook herself was quite a character in
-his way. He could neither read nor write, having been put to work on a
-farm when he was eight years old, but he took a very intelligent
-interest in things. His house was an asylum for stray cats and you
-would find him on a winter's evening sitting in front of a good fire
-with a circle of half a dozen cats round him, all staring like himself
-at the grate. He used to have a fancy for clocks; there must have been
-five or six of all sizes perpetually ticking away in his kitchen, not
-to speak of others that were there but refused to tick any longer. He
-was not content, like other cottagers, with a candle or cheap light,
-but had hanging from the low ceiling a large paraffin lamp, which had
-cost him at least fifteen shillings.
-
-He was never married, and since his mother died, some thirty years ago,
-he never had a woman in the house, and yet few women could have kept it
-cleaner than he did himself.
-
-A white terrier that we had for ten years from 1888 used to associate
-words with ideas even when spoken in ordinary conversation and not
-directly to him. For instance, if he was lying apparently asleep before
-the fire, and we happened in talking without reference to him to
-mention any words that he knew, such as "dog," or "carriage," or
-"walk," he would look up or perhaps just wag his tail.
-
-The same dog had a wonderful gift of reckoning time. He knew Sunday
-perfectly well, and he knew it the first thing in the morning, before
-anything had been done to mark it as different from other days.
-Generally he would lie on the rug at breakfast time and be quite alert
-afterwards and on the watch to go out with us, but on Sundays he went
-straight to his basket when we came down and did not move or look up
-when breakfast was over. From very early days he used to go with my
-wife to afternoon Sunday School. He knew exactly the time when she
-ought to get ready to start, and if then she didn't move he would get
-up and go to her, and he gave her no peace until she went to dress.
-When he arrived at the school he would curl himself up on an old shawl
-in a corner of the room, and until the Lord's Prayer before the final
-grace of the dismissal prayers he would not stir. Directly he heard the
-Lord's Prayer, he would get up in readiness, but he never left his
-corner until the prayers were finished. On one Sunday in the month
-there was catechising in the Church, instead of Sunday school, and Snap
-was wont to be shut up by himself in the schoolroom until the service
-was over. This he didn't much care for, and often when he had started
-joyously as usual for his walk to the school, three-quarters of a mile
-away, as soon as he came near enough to hear the church bell ringing,
-he quietly turned round and went home. When he had been with us for
-about eight years we took him to London for several weeks. He made the
-best of it, and seemed to enjoy himself in a way, but it was almost
-pathetic to see the change directly we got out of the train on our way
-back. We had to drive three miles in a fly, and though Snap's place was
-at the bottom under our feet, as soon as we got within a mile of home,
-he seemed to know the smell of the country and was all excitement, and
-when he found himself really at home he was quite beside himself with
-joy and did not rest until he had visited in turn every familiar nook
-and corner in the garden, then he threw himself down on his own rug in
-his own house with a sigh of relief and satisfaction.
-
-I remember the same love of home in the case of another dog, a mongrel
-long-haired terrier that I had from a puppy. When he was more than ten
-years old he was taken to live in Hertfordshire. His friends there were
-devoted to him and did all they could to make him happy, but his nature
-quite changed, he lost his former boisterous spirits and seemed rather
-to endure than to enjoy life. After he had been away four years I
-brought him back; he was then, of course, old as dogs go, nearly 15,
-but it seemed as though the intervening years had been a dream, and he
-was himself again at once, just as joyous, noisy and
-determined-spirited as he had ever been, and fell into all his old ways
-of life, as if he had been absent only a day.
-
-This same dog, Stumpy we called him, had one little practical joke that
-showed a sense of humour. At a farm about half-a-mile away there was a
-pond, or as we say here a "pit," separated only by a hedge from the
-road. On this pit there were nearly always ducks and it was a favourite
-amusement of Stumpy's to steal quietly up to the road side of the hedge
-just above them, and suddenly give several loud barks. He did this for
-the simple pleasure of seeing the startled ducks rush quacking and
-flapping to the other side of the pond; for he ran on again afterwards
-perfectly unconcerned, content and pleased with himself, and I never
-knew him take the slightest notice of ducks or fowls at any other time.
-
-I remember a rather wonderful instance of intelligence shown by
-Stumpy's father when I had him with me at Oxford. He arrived there for
-the first time late one evening; the next day I took him for a walk
-with friends towards Godstow, and when nearly there we stood to watch
-some men shooting. Sandy hated the sound of a gun, and when we
-remembered him and looked round, he had gone. As he was quite strange
-to the place I scarcely expected to see him again, but I found him
-waiting for me outside the door in Holywell Street when I got home.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I may say in bringing these notes to a conclusion that they have in
-substance been taken from a diary, and that I have not had to depend
-upon my memory for what they contain, as I used to put down in this
-diary at the moment any happenings connected with Natural History that
-I noticed and wished to remember. When after several years I came to
-look through the entries, the idea occurred to me that possibly some of
-the matter might have an interest for others; I may very likely, of
-course, be mistaken in this, all the more so, perhaps, because these
-notes do represent what to me has been a source of very great interest.
-I have had to live for many years an unexciting life, in an
-out-of-the-way country place, with little society, and with few
-opportunities of getting away for a holiday; and yet with the garden
-itself, and the little world it embraces, in making the acquaintance of
-its inhabitants and watching the doings of their daily life, I can
-safely say I do not know what it is to be dull. Of course, I do not
-pretend that Natural History has supplied all the interests I have had
-outside my work, for I am thankful to say there is hardly anything in
-the world that doesn't interest me, but it certainly is the case that
-the tom-tits and the robins and the other birds have always been to me
-as human friends, and have continually provided me with amusement and
-pleasure.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
-Aviary, Outdoor--at Warrington, 68.
-
-
-Barn Owls, 82.
-
-Bats in Old Church, 95.
-
-Birds as friends, 11, 112.
- Power of recognizing one another, 40, 41.
-
-Blackbirds, 17, 22-25, 64, 65, 83, 84.
-
-Blackcaps, 31.
-
-Black Tern, 93.
-
-"Blueback" Cheshire for Fieldfare, 22.
-
-"Blue-cap" Cheshire for Tomtit, 38.
-
-"Blue rock" local name for Stockdove, 94.
-
-Bohemian Waxwing, 94.
-
-Brambling, 67-68.
-
-Bullfinch, 70.
-
-
-Canary, 104.
-
-Cat, changing its home, 106.
- Extreme old age, 103.
- Uncanny spirit, 104.
-
-Chiffchaffs, 33.
-
-Chaffinches, 64-67.
-
-Coal-tits, 38, 41-43.
-
-Contrivances for baffling sparrows on the Food-stand, 59-64.
-
-"Coot" Cheshire for Waterhen, 90.
-
-Corncrakes, 89.
-
-Creeper, Tree-, 56.
-
-Crossbills, 71.
-
-Crows, Carrion-, 74.
- Hooded-, 94.
-
-Cuckoos, 81.
-
-
-Dogs, their intelligence, their love of home, 108-110.
-
-Dogs and cats compared, 103.
-
-
-Earthquake and Pheasants, 89.
-
-Eclipse, a bat flying about while it lasted, 95.
-
-
-Fieldfares, 22.
-
-Figs self-sown, 6.
-
-Flycatchers, Spotted-, 48-51.
- Pied-, 51.
-
-Food for birds, 39.
-
-Food receptacles, 40.
-
-Food-stand, 59-64.
-
-Fox, 97.
-
-Frosts in spring, 3.
-
-
-Garden-warbler, 34.
-
-Golden-crested wrens, 32.
-
-Golden plover, 91.
-
-Goldfinches, 57.
-
-"Goldfinch" Cheshire for Yellow-hammer, 71.
-
-Greater Spotted woodpecker, 79.
-
-Great Tits, 37, 38, 41.
-
-Greenfinches, 57.
-
-Gulls, 93.
-
-
-Hares, 101.
-
-Hawfinches, 58.
-
-Hawks, Hobby, 94.
- Kestrel, 84.
- Sparrowhawk, 84.
-
-Hedgehog, 96.
-
-Hedgesparrows, 35.
-
-Heron, 87.
-
-Hobby, 94.
-
-Holly berries sometimes left untouched, 14.
-
-Hooded crow, 94.
-
-House martins, 54.
-
-House-sparrows, 58-66.
-
-
-Jackdaws, 74.
-
-Jays, 73.
-
-"Jitty" Cheshire for Lesser Redpole, 68.
-
-
-Kestrel, 84-87.
-
-Kingfishers, 80.
-
-"Kit" Cheshire for Redwing, 22.
-
-
-Larks, 76.
-
-Larks and Sparrow Hawk, 84.
-
-Linnet, Green-, see Greenfinch.
- Red-, Goldfinch.
-
-"Longwings" Cheshire for Swift, 77.
-
-
-Magpies, 73.
-
-Marsh-tits, 41-43.
-
-Martins, House-, 54.
- Sand-, 55.
-
-Meadow pipits, 47.
-
-Missel Thrush, 13-16, 21, 86.
-
-Mole, 95.
-
-Mouse, Common-, 99-101.
- Long-tailed, 99.
-
-
-Nightjars, 78.
-
-"Nicker" Cheshire for Goldfinch, 57.
-
-
-"Old man" local name for Spotted flycatcher, 49.
-
-Old man, lover of cats, 108
-
-Owls, Barn or White-, 82.
- Brown, Longeared, and Shorteared-, 84.
-
-
-Partridges, 89.
-
-Peewits, 91.
-
-"Peggy Whitethroat" Cheshire for Willow-warbler, 33.
-
-Pheasants, 88.
-
-"Pied finch" Cheshire for Chaffinch, 67.
-
-Pied flycatcher, 51.
-
-Pied wagtails, 46, 65.
-
-Pipits, Meadow-, 47.
- Tree-, 48.
-
-Plants introduced becoming weeds, 8.
-
-Plover, Golden-, 91.
- Peewits, 91.
-
-
-Rabbits, 98.
-
-Rats, 97.
-
-"Red Linnet" Cheshire for Goldfinch, 57.
-
-Redpoles, Lesser-, 68-70.
-
-Redshanks, 92.
-
-Redstart, 27.
-
-Redwing, 21.
-
-Reed-bunting, 71.
-
-Robins, 18, 27-30, 60, 62, 63.
-
-Rooks, 75.
-
-
-Sand-martins, 55.
-
-Sandpipers, 92.
-
-Sedge-warblers, 34.
-
-"Shercock" Cheshire for Missel Thrush, 13.
-
-Shrews, 99.
-
-Skylarks, 76.
-
-Snails not found in the garden, 4.
-
-Snipe, 92.
-
-Song Thrush, 16-21, 64, 65.
-
-Sparrow Hawks, 84-86.
-
-Sparrow, House-, 58-66.
-
-Sparrows and Owls, 83.
-
-Spotted Flycatchers, 48.
-
-Starlings, 72-73.
-
-Starlings and sparrows, 65.
-
-Stoats, 97.
-
-Stock-doves, 94.
-
-Stonechat, 26.
-
-Swallows, 18, 52-54.
-
-Swallows and Flycatchers, 51, 54.
-
-Swans, 87.
-
-Swifts, 77.
-
-
-Tern, Black-, 93.
-
-"Throstle" Cheshire for Song Thrush, 16.
-
-Thrush, Missel-, 13-16.
- Song-, 16-21.
- Five kinds feeding together, 22.
-
-Tits, Blue- or Tomtit, 38-41.
- Coal-, 38, 41-43.
- Great-, 37, 38, 41.
- Long-tailed-, 37.
- Marsh-, 41-43.
-
-Toads not found in the garden, 4.
-
-Tomatoes self-sown, 6.
-
-Tom-tits, 38-41, 62, 63.
-
-Tree-creeper, 56.
-
-Trees in the garden, 2.
-
-Tree-pipit, 48.
-
-Turtledoves, 88.
-
-Two nests, one above the other, 94.
-
-
-Voles, 99.
-
-
-Wagtails, Pied-, 46, 47.
- Yellow-, 47.
-
-Wagtails and swallows, 54.
-
-Warrington Town-hall outdoor aviary, 68.
-
-Waterhens, 90.
-
-"Weasel" local name for Stoat, 97.
-
-Wheatears, 26.
-
-Whinchats, 26.
-
-Whitethroats, Greater-, 30.
- Lesser-, 31.
-
-Wild duck, 87.
-
-Wild geese, 87.
-
-Willow-warblers, 12, 33.
-
-Woodpecker, Greater spotted-, 79.
- Green-, 79.
- Lesser spotted-, 80.
-
-Wood-pigeons, 87.
-
-Wood-wren, 34.
-
-Wren, 18, 43-45.
-
-
-Yellow-hammer, 71.
-
-Yew-tree, Old-, in churchyard, 2.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-Standardized bird name hyphenation, made minor punctuation changes, and
-the following correction:
-
-Page 84: Changed "neast" to "least."
- Orig: without attracting the neast notice from any bird.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton.
@@ -83,49 +83,7 @@ table {
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</head>
<body>
-
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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-
-
-Title: In a Cheshire Garden
- Natural History Notes
-
-Author: Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
-
-Release Date: July 16, 2012 [EBook #40249]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN A CHESHIRE GARDEN ***
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-Produced by sp1nd, Diane Monico, and the Online Distributed
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-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40249 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;">
<img src="images/i_cover.jpg" width="290" height="450" alt="(cover)" />
@@ -979,7 +937,7 @@ are hunting in and out the yews and Scotch firs, sometimes a large
party, sometimes only a single pair.</p>
<p>One June day I was sitting in a cousin's garden in Wales, when out of
-an arbor-vitæ close by appeared a dilapidated-looking gold-crest, which
+an arbor-vitæ close by appeared a dilapidated-looking gold-crest, which
set to work violently and persistently to abuse me. Herein, I think,
like the whitethroat mentioned before, it displayed either a perversion
of instinct or a want of sense. If it had only kept quiet I should not
@@ -3217,385 +3175,6 @@ standardize the hyphenation used in the majority of the book.
Page <a href="#Page_84">84</a>: Changed "neast" to "least."<br />
<span style="margin-left: 2em;"> Orig: without attracting the neast notice from any bird.</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's In a Cheshire Garden, by Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton
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-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN A CHESHIRE GARDEN ***
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