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-Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Birds, by Olive Thorne Miller
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-Release Date: October 22, 2012 [EBook #41141]
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-Language: English
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41141 ***
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-Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Birds, by Olive Thorne Miller
-
-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: The Children's Book of Birds
-
-Author: Olive Thorne Miller
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2012 [EBook #41141]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-[Illustration: BARN SWALLOW]
-
-
-
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-BY
-
-OLIVE THORNE MILLER
-
-WITH SIXTEEN COLORED PLATES AND MANY OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-[Illustration]
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1899 AND 1901, BY H. M. MILLER
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS combines under a single cover the First and
-Second Books of Birds, originally published in 1899 and 1901
-respectively and still popular with children in and out of school and
-with other beginners in the study of birds.
-
-The book is intended to interest young people in the ways and habits of
-birds and to stimulate them to further study. It has grown out of my
-experience in talking to schools. From the youngest kindergarten scholar
-to boys and girls of sixteen and eighteen, I have never failed to find
-young people intensely interested so long as I would tell them about bow
-the birds live.
-
-Some of the results of these talks that have come to my knowledge have
-been astonishing and far-reaching, such as that of one boy of seven or
-eight, who persuaded the village boys around his summer home to give up
-taking eggs and killing birds, and watch them instead, and who was
-dubbed "Professor" by his eager followers. The effect has always been to
-make children love and respect the living bird.
-
-It has therefore seemed to me that what is needed at first is not the
-science of ornithology,--however diluted,--but some account of the life
-and habits, to arouse sympathy and interest in the living bird, neither
-as a target nor as a producer of eggs, but as a fellow-creature whose
-acquaintance it would be pleasant to make.
-
-Naturally I have drawn on my own observations for much of the matter
-contained in this book, but these have been supplemented by consultation
-of recognized authorities in the various fields of ornithology.
-
-In each bird family treated of in the Second Book I have given accounts
-of species to be found in the South and West as well as in the Eastern
-States, and I have selected the most common or typical species of each
-family. In cases where it was possible, I have chosen species
-represented in the different sections of the country, not only because
-the family traits are better shown, but because it is more encouraging
-to a beginner to become acquainted with birds he can see almost
-anywhere. When familiar with these, he will be able to identify and
-study the rarer species.
-
- OLIVE THORNE MILLER.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- FIRST BOOK
-
- I. WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW 1
- II. WHEN THEY COME IN THE SPRING 3
-
-
- THE NESTLING
-
- III. THE BIRD'S HOME 9
- IV. THE BABY BIRD 13
- V. HOW HE IS FED 17
- VI. HIS FIRST SUIT 21
- VII. HOW HE CHANGES HIS CLOTHES 25
- VIII. HIS FIRST FLIGHT 29
- IX. HIS EDUCATION 33
- X. SOME OF HIS LESSONS 37
-
-
- THE BIRD GROWN UP
-
- XI. THE BIRD'S LANGUAGE 43
- XII. WHAT HE EATS 48
- XIII. MORE ABOUT HIS FOOD 52
- XIV. WHERE HE SLEEPS 57
- XV. HIS TRAVELS 61
- XVI. HIS WINTER HOME 66
- XVII. HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS 70
- XVIII. HIS KINDNESS TO OTHERS 74
- XIX. HIS AFFECTIONS 78
- XX. HIS INTELLIGENCE 83
-
-
- HOW HE IS MADE
-
- XXI. HIS BODY 91
- XXII. HIS BEAK AND TONGUE 95
- XXIII. HIS EYES AND EARS 100
- XXIV. HIS FEET AND LEGS 105
- XXV. HIS WINGS AND TAIL 109
- XXVI. HIS DRESS 114
- XXVII. DIFFERENT COLORED SUITS 118
-
-
- HIS RELATIONS WITH US
-
- XXVIII. HOW HE WORKS FOR US 125
- XXIX. HOW TO ATTRACT HIM ABOUT OUR HOMES 131
- XXX. HOW TO STUDY HIM 136
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
- I. WHAT IS A BIRD FAMILY? 1
- II. THE THRUSH FAMILY 5
- American Robin 6
- Hermit Thrush 11
- III. THE KINGLET AND GNATCATCHER FAMILY 14
- Ruby-crowned Kinglet 14
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 16
- IV. THE NUTHATCH AND CHICKADEE FAMILY 18
- White-breasted Nuthatch 18
- Red-breasted Nuthatch 20
- Chickadee 22
- Tufted Titmouse 24
- V. THE CREEPER FAMILY 27
- Brown Creeper 27
- VI. THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY (First Branch) 30
- House Wren 31
- VII. THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY (Second Branch) 34
- Mockingbird 34
- Catbird 37
- Thrasher 40
- VIII. THE DIPPER FAMILY 42
- American Dipper 42
- IX. THE WAGTAIL FAMILY 46
- Sprague's Pipit 46
- X. THE WARBLER FAMILY 49
- Yellow Warbler 50
- Oven-bird 52
- Yellow-breasted Chat 53
- XI. THE VIREO FAMILY 55
- Yellow-throated Vireo 56
- Warbling Vireo 57
- XII. THE SHRIKE FAMILY 59
- Loggerhead Shrike 59
- XIII. THE WAXWING FAMILY 63
- Cedar-bird 63
- Phainopepla 67
- XIV. THE SWALLOW FAMILY 69
- Barn Swallow 69
- Cliff Swallow, or Eave Swallow 72
- Purple Martin 72
- XV. THE TANAGER FAMILY 75
- Scarlet Tanager 75
- Summer Tanager 78
- Louisiana Tanager 78
- XVI. THE SPARROW AND FINCH FAMILY 80
- SPARROWS
- Song Sparrow 81
- FINCHES
- Goldfinch 82
- Towhee, or Chewink 84
- XVII. THE GROSBEAK BRANCH 86
- Rose-breasted Grosbeak 86
- Black-headed Grosbeak 88
- Cardinal Grosbeak, or Cardinal 88
- XVIII. THE CROSSBILL BRANCH 91
- American Crossbill 91
- White-winged Crossbill 92
- XIX. THE BLACKBIRD FAMILY 94
- MARSH BLACKBIRDS
- Red-winged Blackbird 94
- Cowbird 98
- XX. THE MEADOW STARLINGS 100
- Meadowlark 100
- Western Meadowlark 102
- XXI. THE ORIOLE BRANCH 104
- Baltimore Oriole 104
- Orchard Oriole 107
- Arizona Hooded Oriole 108
- XXII. THE CROW-BLACKBIRD BRANCH 110
- Purple Grackle 112
- Bronzed Grackle 112
- Brewer's Blackbird 113
- XXIII. THE CROW FAMILY 117
- American Crow 117
- Blue Jay 121
- Steller's Jay 126
- American Magpie 126
- XXIV. THE LARK FAMILY 131
- Horned Lark 131
- Prairie Horned Lark 131
- XXV. THE FLYCATCHING FAMILY 135
- Kingbird 136
- Arkansas Kingbird 140
- Wood Pewee 140
- Western Wood Pewee 142
- XXVI. THE HUMMING FAMILY 143
- Ruby-throated Hummingbird 144
- Anna's Hummingbird 149
- XXVII. THE SWIFT FAMILY 150
- Chimney Swift 150
- XXVIII. THE GOATSUCKER FAMILY 155
- Whip-poor-will 155
- Chuck-will's-widow 157
- Poor-will 157
- Nighthawk 158
- XXIX. THE WOODPECKER FAMILY 160
- Northern Flicker 161
- Red-shafted Flicker 162
- Red-headed Woodpecker 165
- Californian Woodpecker 167
- XXX. THE KINGFISHER FAMILY 170
- Belted Kingfisher 170
- XXXI. THE CUCKOO FAMILY 174
- Yellow-billed Cuckoo 174
- XXXII. THE OWL FAMILY 178
- Screech Owl 180
- Burrowing Owl 182
- XXXIII. THE BARN OWL FAMILY 185
- American Barn Owl 185
- XXXIV. THE HAWK AND EAGLE FAMILY 188
- American Sparrow Hawk 189
- American Osprey, or Fish Hawk 190
- Bald Eagle 192
- XXXV. THE SCAVENGER FAMILY 194
- Turkey Vulture 194
- APPENDIX
- Characters of the North American Representatives of the
- Families mentioned in this Book 197
- INDEX 205
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- BARN SWALLOW (colored) _Frontispiece_
-
-
-FIRST BOOK
-
- BALTIMORE ORIOLE AND NEST (colored) 10
- REDSTARTS (FEMALE ON NEST) (colored) 14
- RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD--MALE, FEMALE, AND
- NEST WITH YOUNG 18
- YOUNG WOOD THRUSH 22
- AMERICAN GOLDFINCH (colored) 26
- BLUEBIRD (colored) 38
- INDIGO-BIRD 46
- AMERICAN ROBIN (colored) 60
- CHEWINK 76
- HOUSE WREN 80
- FLICKER 86
- WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH 96
- LESSER YELLOWLEGS 106
- BROWN THRASHER 112
- BLACK AND WHITE WARBLER 120
- CEDAR-BIRD (colored) 126
- SCARLET TANAGER--MALE AND FEMALE 142
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
- HERMIT THRUSH 10
- RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 14
- CHICKADEE 22
- BROWN CREEPER (colored) 28
- CATBIRD 36
- AMERICAN DIPPER 42
- SPRAGUE'S PIPIT 46
- YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT (colored) 52
- YELLOW-THROATED VIREO AND NEST 56
- LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE 60
- SCARLET TANAGER (colored) 76
- ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK (colored) 86
- CARDINAL 90
- RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD 94
- MEADOWLARK (colored) 100
- BLUE JAY 122
- AMERICAN MAGPIE (colored) 126
- DESERT HORNED LARK 132
- KINGBIRD (colored) 136
- NIGHTHAWK 158
- DOWNY WOODPECKER 166
- BELTED KINGFISHER (colored) 170
- YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO 174
- SCREECH OWL 180
- SPARROW HAWK 188
- AMERICAN OSPREY, OR FISH HAWK (colored) 192
-
- Eight of the sixteen colored plates are from drawings
- by Louis Agassiz Fuertes, and these are signed with
- his name. The other colored plates and the
- twenty-eight plain half-tones are from photographs of
- mounted specimens, many of which are in the collection
- of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, in Cambridge,
- Massachusetts, and are reproduced by permission.
-
- The First Book also contains twenty cuts in the text.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST BOOK
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRST BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW
-
-
-BIRDS seem to be the happiest creatures on earth, yet they have none of
-what we call the comforts of life.
-
-They have no houses to live in, no beds to sleep on, no breakfast and
-dinner provided for them.
-
-This book is to tell something about them; where they live and what they
-eat, where they sleep, how they get their beautiful dress, and many
-other things. But no one can tell all about their lives and habits, for
-no one knows all their ways.
-
-Men who study dead birds can tell how they are made, how their bones are
-put together, and how many feathers there are in the wings and tail. Of
-course it is well to know these things. But to see how birds live is
-much more interesting than to look at dead ones.
-
-It is pleasant to see how mother birds build their nests, and how they
-take care of their nestlings. It is charming to see the young ones when
-they begin to fly, and to know how they are taught to find their food,
-and to keep out of danger, and to sing, and everything young birds need
-to know.
-
-Then when they are grown up, it is interesting to find out where they go
-in winter, and why they do not stay with us all the year round.
-
-One who goes into the field to watch and study their ways will be
-surprised to find how much like people they act. And after studying
-living birds, he will never want to kill them. It will seem to him
-almost like murder.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-WHEN THEY COME IN THE SPRING
-
-
-IN the long, cold winter of the New England and Middle States, not many
-birds are usually seen. In the cities there is always the English
-sparrow, and in the country, now and then a chickadee, or a woodpecker,
-or a small flock of goldfinches.
-
-But very early in the spring, long before grass is green, even while
-snow is on the ground, the birds begin to come.
-
-Some morning a robin will appear, standing up very straight on a fence
-or tree, showing his bright red breast and black cap, flirting his tail,
-and looking as if he were glad to be back in his old home.
-
-Then perhaps the same day will come the hoarse chack of a blackbird, and
-two or three will fly over and alight in a big bare tree, looking, it
-may be, for a good place to build a bird city.
-
-Soon will be heard the sweet little song of the song sparrow or the
-bluebird, and then we shall know that summer is coming, for these are
-the first birds of spring.
-
-Day after day, as the snow melts away and the sunshine grows hotter,
-more birds will come. One day a catbird or two, another day an oriole in
-black and gold, and another day a pert little wren. So it will go on,
-till by the time June comes in, all our birds will be back with us, very
-busy, hopping around in our bushes and trees, making their nests all
-about, and singing the whole day long.
-
-Almost the first thing every bird thinks of, when he comes to us, is
-making the nest. For summer is the only time in his life that a bird has
-a home.
-
-He does not need a house to live in. He cares nothing for a roof to
-cover him, because when the sun is hot, he has the broad green leaves on
-the trees to shade him. And when it rains his neat feather coat is like
-a waterproof that lets the drops run off, leaving him warm and dry under
-it.
-
-He does not need a dining-room, because he eats wherever he finds his
-food, and he wants no kitchen, because he prefers his food raw.
-
-He has no use for a bedroom, because he can sleep on any twig; the whole
-world is his bedroom.
-
-He cares nothing for closets and bureaus, because he has only one suit
-of clothes at a time, and he washes and dries that without taking it
-off.
-
-He wants no fire to keep him warm, for when it is too cold he spreads
-his wings and flies to a warmer place. A bird has really no need of a
-house,--excepting when he is a baby, before his eyes are open, or his
-feathers have come, or his wings have grown. While he is blind, naked,
-and hungry, he must have a warm, snug cradle.
-
-So when the bird fathers and mothers come in the spring the first thing
-they do is to find good places and build nice cradles, for they are very
-fond of their little ones. They spend the spring and summer in working
-for them, keeping them warm, feeding them till they are grown up, and
-then teaching them to fly and to take care of themselves, so that when
-summer is gone they will be ready to go with the other birds to their
-winter home.
-
-
-
-
-THE NESTLING
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE BIRD'S HOME
-
-
-EACH bird mother has her own way of making the nest, but there is one
-thing almost all of them try to do, and that is to hide it.
-
-They cannot put their little homes out in plain sight, as we do our
-houses, because so many creatures want to rob them. Squirrels and snakes
-and rats, and some big birds, and cats and many others, like to eat eggs
-and young birds.
-
-So most birds try, first of all, to find good hiding-places. Some tiny
-warblers go to the tops of the tallest trees, and hide the nest among
-the leaves. Orioles hang the swinging cradle at the end of a branch,
-where cats and snakes and naughty boys cannot come. Song sparrows tuck
-the little home in a tuft of weeds, on the ground, and bobolinks hide it
-in the deep grass.
-
-After a safe place is found, they have to get something to build of.
-They hunt all about and gather small twigs, or grass stems, or fine
-rootlets, and pull narrow strips of bark off the grapevines and the
-birch-trees, or they pick up strings and horsehairs, and many other
-things. Robins and swallows use mud.
-
-[Illustration: BALTIMORE ORIOLE AND NEST]
-
-As they go on building, the mother bird gets inside and turns around and
-around to make it fit her form, and be smooth and comfortable for her to
-sit in.
-
-When a nest is made, it must be lined. Then some birds go to the chicken
-yard, and pick up feathers, and others find horsehairs. Some of them
-pull off the soft down that grows on plants, or get bits of wool from
-the sheep pasture, or old leaves from the woods, and make it soft and
-warm inside.
-
-Some bird homes are only platforms, where it seems as if the eggs must
-roll off, and others are deep burrows, or holes in the ground, where no
-one can get in. Some are dainty baskets hung between two twigs, and
-others are tiny cups of felt with lichens outside.
-
-Each species of bird builds in its own way. There are as many different
-ways to make nests as there are kinds of birds to make them.
-
-Then after all the trouble birds have taken to build a nest, they seldom
-use it a second time. If a pair have two broods in a season, they almost
-always build a new one for each family.
-
-A few birds, such as eagles, owls, and sometimes orioles, and others,
-repair the home and use it again, and woodpeckers sometimes nest in the
-old holes. But generally, after the young birds have flown, we may be
-sure the nest will not be wanted again.
-
-When the nest is finished, the eggs are laid in it, one by one. We all
-know how pretty birds' eggs are. Some are snowy white, some are delicate
-pink, and some blue. Many have tiny dots and specks on them, and a few
-are covered with queer-looking streaks and lines. But pretty as they
-are, I think no one would be so cruel as to take them away from the poor
-little mother, if he remembered that her young ones are inside them, and
-that she loves them as his own mother loves him.
-
-I have heard people say that birds do not care for their eggs. Let me
-tell you what a little chickadee mother did when a man tried to steal
-the eggs out of her nest.
-
-The nest was in a hole in an old stump, and the man could not get his
-hand in, so he had to take them out one at a time with a little scoop.
-
-At first the mother flew at him and tried to drive him away. Then
-chickadees and other birds who lived near came to help her. All flew
-about his face with cries, so that he had to use one hand to keep them
-away from his eyes. But still he went on taking out the eggs.
-
-At last the little mother was so wild with grief that she dashed into
-the hole and sat there in the doorway, right before his face. He could
-not get another egg without hurting her, and he was ashamed to do that.
-
-This was as brave in the tiny creature as it would be for a human mother
-to throw herself before a fierce, hungry tiger. Do you think she did not
-care for her eggs?
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE BABY BIRD
-
-
-A BABY bird, as you know, always comes out of an egg. And beautiful as
-these eggs are, they are most interesting when you think that each one
-holds a tiny bird.
-
-Eggs are not all alike, of course. One the size of a bean is large
-enough to hold a hummingbird baby, till it is old enough to come out.
-But the young ostrich needs a shell nearly as big as your head. So there
-are all sizes of eggs to fit the different sizes of birds.
-
-If you should break a fresh egg you would not see a bird, for it would
-not be formed at that time. After the egg is laid in its soft bed, it
-has to be kept warm for many days, and that is why the mother bird sits
-on her nest so quietly. She is keeping the eggs warm, so that the little
-ones will form and grow, till they are as big as the shells can hold.
-
-While the mother is sitting her mate does all he can to help, though
-each species has its own way. The blue jay brings food to his mate, so
-that she need not leave the nest at all, and many others do so. But the
-kingbird father simply watches the nest to protect it while the mother
-goes for food. A redstart gets into the nest himself, to keep the eggs
-warm while his mate is gone, and a goldfinch coaxes his mate to go off
-with him for a lunch, leaving nest and eggs to take care of themselves.
-
-[Illustration: REDSTARTS (FEMALE ON NEST)]
-
-Another thing the father birds do is to sing. This is the time when we
-hear so much bird song. The singers have little to do but to wait, and
-so they please themselves, and their mates, and us too, by singing a
-great deal.
-
-When the little birds begin to be cramped, and find their cradle too
-tight, they peck at the shell with a sort of tooth that grows on the end
-of the beak, and is called the "egg tooth." This soon breaks the shell,
-and they come out. Then the mother or father carefully picks up the
-pieces of shell, carries them off, and throws them away, leaving only
-the little ones in the nest. Perhaps you have found these broken shells
-on the ground sometimes, and could not guess how they came there. When
-the birdlings break out of their prison they do not all look the same.
-Ducks and geese and chickens and quails, and other birds who live on
-the ground, as well as hawks and owls, are dressed in pretty suits of
-down. They have their eyes open, and the ground birds are ready to run
-about at once.
-
-A man who studied birds, once saw a young duck get its first suit of
-down. He picked up the egg just as the little bird inside was trying to
-get out. In a few minutes the shell fell apart, and out stepped the
-duckling on his hand. It seemed to be covered with coarse black hairs,
-which in a moment began to burst open, one by one, and out of each came
-a soft fluff of down. So in a few minutes, while the man stood there and
-held him, the little duck was all covered with his pretty dress.
-
-But most birds hatched in nests in trees and bushes, like robins and
-bluebirds, are very different. When they come out of their shells they
-are naked, have their eyes shut, and look as if they were nearly all
-mouth. A young hummingbird looks about as big as a honey bee, and a
-robin baby not much bigger than the eggshell he came out of.
-
-They lie flat down in the nest, seeming to be asleep most of the time.
-All they want is to be warm and to be fed.
-
-To keep them warm, the mother sits on them a great part of the time, and
-for the first few days of their lives, the father often brings most of
-the food. Sometimes he gives it to the mother, and she feeds the little
-ones. But sometimes she gets off the nest, and flies away to rest, and
-get something to eat for herself, while he feeds the nestlings.
-
-There is one bird father who--it is thought--never comes to the nest,
-either to watch the eggs or to help feed the nestlings. That is our
-hummingbird, the ruby throat.
-
-We do not know the reason for this, and it is not fair to say hard
-things about him until we do. It may be that he thinks his shining ruby
-would show the hiding-place of the nest, or it may be that the little
-mother is not willing to have any help. I think this last is the real
-reason, for she has a great deal of spirit, and always drives away
-others from her feeding-places.
-
-Young birds grow very fast, and soon feathers begin to come out all over
-them. They are not very pretty at this time.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-HOW HE IS FED
-
-
-SOON after the young bird comes out of the egg, he begins to be hungry.
-All day long, whenever the father or mother comes near, he opens his
-great mouth as wide as he can, to have it filled, and the moment he gets
-his voice he cries for food.
-
-Then the old birds have to work hard. Three or four hungry nestlings can
-keep both father and mother busy from morning till night, hunting for
-caterpillars and beetles and grubs and other things to feed them. It
-seems as if the little fellows never could get enough to eat. Each
-swallow baby wants seven or eight hundred small flies every day, and a
-baby robin needs more earthworms in a day than you can hold in your hand
-at once.
-
-At this time you will see robins hunting over the lawn, and carrying
-great beakfuls of worms up to the nest. Bluebirds you will find looking
-in the grass, and sparrows hopping about on the ground, all seeking
-soft worms and grubs and insects for the nestlings; and they are so busy
-they do not get much time for singing.
-
-[Illustration: RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD]
-
-At this time the orioles go all over the orchard trees looking for tiny
-worms, and little warblers seek them under every leaf.
-
-Woodpeckers find the insects hidden behind the bark of trees, by cutting
-holes through it. Chickadees and nuthatches pick the tiniest insect eggs
-out of the crevices, and flickers hunt everywhere for ants.
-
-As soon as one of the old birds has his mouth full, he flies to the nest
-to feed the young.
-
-But not all birds feed in the same way. A robin just drops a big
-earthworm, or a part of one, into the gaping baby mouth. Many other
-birds do so also. Sometimes, when an insect is too big or too hard, they
-beat it till it is soft, or break it up, before giving it to a little
-one.
-
-But hummingbird mothers and flicker mothers have a different way. When
-they collect the food they swallow it, as if they wanted it for
-themselves. Then they go to the nest, and jerk it up again in mouthfuls,
-and feed the nestlings. This is called feeding by "regurgitation," or
-"throwing up."
-
-The way they give the food is very curious. They push their long beaks
-into the nestling's throat, and poke the food far down; so the young
-one does not even have the trouble of swallowing.
-
-This looks as if it must hurt, but the nestling seems to like it, and is
-always ready for more. The pigeon mother lets the young one poke his
-beak down her throat, and get the food for himself.
-
-If the food is hard, like corn, birds who feed in this way let it stay
-in the crop till it is soft and better fitted for tender throats, before
-they give it out.
-
-It is comical to see a nest full of little birds when the father or
-mother comes with food. All stretch up and open their big mouths as wide
-as they can, and if they are old enough, they cry as if they were
-starving.
-
-Some birds bring food enough for all in the nest, every time they come.
-A cedar-bird, feeding wild cherries, brought five of them every time,
-one for each of the five nestlings. One cherry was held in his mouth,
-but the other four were down his throat, and had to be jerked up one by
-one.
-
-Other birds bring only one mouthful at a time, and when there are five
-or six in the nest, they have to make as many journeys before all are
-fed.
-
-Some persons who have studied birds think that each nestling is fed in
-its turn; but they look so much alike, and are so close together, that
-it is hard to tell, and I am not sure that it is so.
-
-I will tell you a story I have heard about feeding little birds. A child
-picked up a young goldfinch who had fallen out of the nest. He took him
-home and put him into the canary's cage, which was hanging on the front
-porch.
-
-Soon the family heard a great noise among the birds, and went out to see
-what was the matter. The baby goldfinch had hopped on to a perch in the
-cage, and seemed to be afraid to come down, though the old birds had
-brought food for him, and were calling him to take it.
-
-The canary looked on a while, and then all at once he flew to the wires
-and took the food from the birds outside; then he went back to the perch
-beside the little one and gave it to him. This he did many times.
-
-The next day another young goldfinch was picked up and put in the cage,
-and the canary took food from the parents and fed both.
-
-After a few days the old birds came with a third little one, and as all
-were now old enough to fly, the cage door was opened, and they all flew
-away.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-HIS FIRST SUIT
-
-
-SOME birds that live on the ground--as I told you--have dresses of down
-to begin with. These little fellows have no warm nest to stay in, but
-run around almost as soon as they come out of the egg. Young ducks and
-geese wear this baby suit for weeks, before they begin to put on their
-feather coats.
-
-Young birds that spend most of their time in the water, like grebes, and
-others that live in a cold country, have the down very thick and fine,
-like heavy underclothes, to keep them dry and warm.
-
-Birds whose home is underground, like the kingfisher, or in the trunk of
-a tree, like the woodpecker, have hardly any down at all. They need no
-baby clothes in their warm cradles.
-
-Robins and most other song birds have only a little down on them, and
-very soon the feathers begin to grow.
-
-When the tiny quills push themselves up, they look like little white
-pins sticking out all over. Each bit of down grows out of a little
-raised place on the skin that looks like a pimple, and the feather comes
-out of the same.
-
-[Illustration: YOUNG WOOD THRUSH]
-
-As the feather grows, the bit of down clings to it till it is broken
-off. Sometimes it holds on till the feather is well out. We can often
-see down sticking to a young bird's feathers.
-
-The little feathers grow very fast, and before he is ready to fly a
-young bird is well covered. Birds hatched with their eyes open, and
-already dressed, who have to run and fly very soon, get their wing
-feathers early; but birds who live many days in the nest, like robins
-and bluebirds, do not get theirs till they are nearly grown.
-
-The tail feathers are the last to come to full length, and you will
-notice that most birds just out of the nest have very dumpy tails.
-
-A bird's first suit of feathers is called his nestling plumage. In some
-families it is just like the dress of the grown-up birds, but in others
-it is not at all like that. It is usually worn only a few weeks, for the
-young one outgrows it, and needs a new and bigger one before winter.
-
-When a bird is fully dressed, his body is entirely covered, and it looks
-as if the feathers grew close to each other all over him. But it is not
-so. The feathers grow in patterns, called "feather tracts," with
-spaces of bare skin between them. These bare places do not show, because
-the feathers lap over each other and cover them.
-
-The pattern of the feather tracts is not the same in all birds. A few
-birds of the Ostrich family have feathers all over the body.
-
-There is another curious thing about the nestling plumage. You would
-expect a young bird to look like his father or mother; and some of them
-do. Many nestlings are dressed exactly like their mothers; and not until
-they are a year old do the young males get a coat like their father's.
-Some of them, indeed, do not have their grown-up suits for two or three
-years.
-
-Then, again, many young birds have dresses different from both parents.
-Young robins have speckled breasts, and spots on the shoulders, which
-the old birds have not.
-
-When the father and mother are dressed alike, as the song sparrows are,
-the young birds generally differ from both of them. When the father and
-mother are different, like orioles or bluebirds, the young are usually
-like the mother the first season. In some cases the father, mother, and
-young are almost exactly alike.
-
-Birds who live on the ground need dresses of dull colors, or they would
-not be very safe. The ostrich mother, who makes her nest in plain sight
-on the sand, is dressed in grayish brown. When she sits on the eggs, she
-lays her long neck flat on the ground before her; then she looks like
-one of the ant-hills that are common on the plains of Africa, where she
-lives.
-
-The South American ostrich, or rhea, fluffs out her feathers and looks
-like a heap of dry grass. The male ostrich is dressed in showy black and
-white, and he stays away all day, but takes care of the nest at night,
-when his striking colors cannot be seen.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-HOW HE CHANGES HIS CLOTHES
-
-
-IT takes a bird weeks to put on a new suit of clothes. He has nothing
-but his feathers to protect him from cold and wet, and as feathers
-cannot grow out in a minute, he would be left naked, and suffer, if he
-lost them all at once. So he changes his dress one or two feathers at a
-time.
-
-Some day a feather will drop from each wing. If you could look, you
-would see that new ones had started out in the same place, and pushed
-the old ones off. When the new ones are pretty well grown another pair
-will fall out.
-
-If all dropped out at once, besides suffering with cold he would not be
-able to fly, and he could not get his living, and anybody could catch
-him. But losing only one from each side at a time, he always has enough
-to fly with.
-
-It is the same way with his tail feathers. He loses them in pairs, one
-from each side at the same time.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN GOLDFINCH]
-
-The soft feathers that cover his body drop out one by one. Thus all the
-time he is putting on a new suit he still wears part of the old one. In
-this way he is never left without clothes for a moment.
-
-Most birds put on their new suits just after the young ones are grown
-up, and before they all start for the South to spend the winter,--that
-is, with many of our common birds, in August. At that time they are
-rather shy, and stop singing. If you did not see one now and then, you
-might think they were all gone.
-
-Sometimes the new fall suit is not at all like the old one. There is the
-goldfinch, all summer in bright yellow. When he comes out in his new
-suit in August, it is dull-colored, much like the one his mate wears all
-the year, and in winter, when goldfinches fly around in little flocks,
-they look nearly all alike.
-
-In the spring, the male goldfinch comes out again in yellow. He has two
-suits a year,--a bright yellow one in the spring, and a dull olive-green
-for the winter. But his new spring dress is not a full suit. The yellow
-of the body is all fresh, but the black wings are the same the year
-round.
-
-Some birds have two, different colored dresses in a year; one they get
-without changing a feather. Suppose they have feathers of black, with
-gray on the outside edges. All winter the gray shows and the birds seem
-to have gray coats. But in spring the gray edges wear or fall off, and
-the black shows, and then they look as if they had come out in new black
-suits. It is as if you should take off a gray overcoat and show a black
-coat under it.
-
-There is another interesting thing about birds' dress. Some of them look
-like their mates, the father and mother birds so nearly alike that it is
-hard, sometimes impossible, to tell them apart. But when that is the
-case, you will notice that the color is not very gay. If the father
-wears a bright-colored suit, the mother does not look like him.
-
-For this reason the little mother is not too easily seen when she is on
-her nest. If the goldfinch mother were as bright as her mate, everybody
-who came near would see her on the nest, and some animal might take her,
-and leave the young birds to starve to death. That is probably why
-mother birds dress in such dull colors.
-
-When birds live on the ground, or very near it, in most cases both of
-the pair wear the dull colors, so they will not easily be seen. Wrens
-and sparrows and many others are so. But birds who make their nests in
-holes, or under ground, are often as bright as their mates, because
-they cannot be seen while sitting, and do not need to wear dull colors.
-
-A curious thing about a bird's color is that the same species, or kind
-of bird, is darker in one place than another. Where there is much
-dampness or wet weather, the colors are darker. For instance, a
-bob-white who lives in Florida, or one who lives in Oregon, will be much
-darker than his cousin living in New England.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-HIS FIRST FLIGHT
-
-
-WHEN young birds are in the nest they are not very pretty. But when they
-are nearly feathered, and sit up on the edge, exercising their wings,
-and getting ready to fly, they are lovely to look at. Their feathers are
-more fluffy and fresh than those of the old birds.
-
-At that time they have not learned to be afraid of us, and if we do not
-frighten them by roughness, loud talking, or quick movements, we can
-often get near enough to see them well. They will sit up and look at us
-without fear.
-
-Then some day, all at once, a young bird will begin to flap his wings,
-and off he will go, fluttering very hard, beating his wings, and trying
-to reach the next tree.
-
-Sometimes he will reach it, and perch on a twig, and sit quite still a
-long time, tired with his first flight. Then the parents will come and
-feed him, and after a while he will fly again. This time he will go
-farther.
-
-So he will go on, till in a few days he can fly very well, and follow
-his parents about, and begin to learn where to get food.
-
-Sometimes when a young bird leaves the nest he does not reach the tree
-he starts for, but falls to the ground. Then there is trouble among the
-birds. He is in danger of being picked up by a cat or a boy, or of
-getting tangled in the grass or weeds.
-
-The poor parents are half wild with fear. They coax him to try again,
-and they follow him about in the grass, in great distress. I have many
-times picked up a little bird, and set him on a branch of a tree, or
-stood guard over him, driving away cats and keeping off people, till he
-reached a place where he would be safe.
-
-When young birds are out, but cannot yet fly very well, there is much
-anxiety about them. Then, if any one comes around to disturb them, what
-can the poor little mother do? Sometimes she makes her young ones hide.
-Some of the birds who live on the ground will give a certain cry, when
-in a second every little one will crouch on the ground, or creep under a
-leaf, and be perfectly still. And their dark colors look so like the
-earth one can hardly see them.
-
-Then the mother tries to make one look at her by queer antics. She
-pretends to be hurt, and tumbles about as if she could not fly. If it
-is a man or an animal who has frightened her, he will usually think he
-can easily catch her; so he will forget about the young ones, and follow
-her as she goes fluttering over the ground. She will go on playing that
-she is hurt, and moving away, till she leads him far from her brood.
-Then she will start up and fly away, and he cannot find his way back to
-where the little ones are still crouching.
-
-Sometimes when a mother is frightened, she will snatch up her young one
-between her feet, and fly away with it. Sometimes a mother will fight,
-actually fly into the face of the one she fears. Often, too, other birds
-come to her aid; birds of many kinds,--catbirds, robins, thrashers, and
-others,--all come to help her drive away the enemy, for birds are almost
-always ready to help each other.
-
-I once found a young blue jay who had come to the ground while trying
-his first flight. I thought I would pick him up and put him on a branch.
-But the old birds did not know what I meant to do, and perhaps they were
-afraid I would carry him off.
-
-They flew at me with loud cries to drive me away, and I thought it best
-to go, for I did not want to make them any more unhappy than they were
-already.
-
-I did not go far, because I wanted to see that no one caught the little
-one. He hopped about in the grass a long time, while his parents flew
-around him in great distress. Many times he tried to fly, but he could
-not rise more than two feet from the ground.
-
-At last he seemed to make up his mind to climb a tree, for when he came
-to one with a rough bark he began to go up. He would fly up a few
-inches, then hold on with his claws to rest. And so, half flying and
-half climbing, he went on till he reached the lowest limb. On that he
-perched and was quiet, glad to rest after his hard work. The old birds
-were happy, too, and brought food to him, and so I left them.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-HIS EDUCATION
-
-
-THE young bird has to be educated, or trained for his life, just as we
-do, though not exactly in the same way.
-
-He does not have to know arithmetic and history; and what he needs of
-geography is only the road to the South, where he spends his winters.
-
-I suppose the first thing he learns is to fly. You have heard, perhaps,
-that the old birds drive their young out of the nest. But do not believe
-any such thing, for it is not true. I have seen many little birds leave
-the nest, and almost every one flew when the parents were away after
-food.
-
-The parents sometimes try to coax a nestling who is afraid to try his
-wings, like an oriole I knew of. All the young orioles had flown except
-this one, and he seemed to be too timid to try. He stood on the edge of
-the nest, and called and cried, but did not use his wings.
-
-The father came to see him now and then, and at last he made him fly in
-this way. He caught a fine, large moth, and brought it to the nest in
-his beak. The young bird was very hungry, and when he saw the food, he
-opened his mouth and fluttered his wings, so eager to get it he could
-hardly wait.
-
-But the parent did not feed him. He let him see the moth, and then, with
-a loud call, he flew to the next tree. When the little oriole saw the
-food going away, he forgot he was afraid, and with a cry of horror he
-sprang after it; and so, before he knew it, he had flown.
-
-After the young bird can fly, he needs to be taught to get his own
-living, or to find his own food, and also where to sleep. Then he must
-learn what to be afraid of, and how to protect himself from his enemies.
-
-He needs to know the different calls and cries of his family, and what
-they all mean. He has to learn to fly in a flock with other birds, and
-he must learn to sing. No doubt there are many more lessons for him that
-we do not know about.
-
-If you watch little birds just out of the nest, you may see them being
-taught the most useful and important lesson, how to find their food.
-
-The robin mother takes her little one to the ground, and shows him
-where the worms live and how to get them. The owl mother finds a mouse
-creeping about in the grass, and teaches the owlets how to pounce upon
-it, by doing it herself before them.
-
-The old swallow takes her youngsters into the air, and shows them how to
-catch little flies on the wing; while mother phoebe teaches hers to sit
-still and watch till a fly comes near, and then fly out and catch it.
-
-If you watch long enough, after a while you may see the old bird, who is
-training a young one, fly away. She may leave the young one alone on a
-tree or the ground, and be gone a long time.
-
-Before many minutes the little one will get hungry, and begin to call
-for food. But by and by, if nobody comes to feed him, he will think to
-look around for something to eat. Thus he will get his lesson in helping
-himself.
-
-Once I saw a woodpecker father bring his little one to a fence, close by
-some raspberry bushes that were full of berries. He fed him two or three
-berries, to teach him what they were and where they grew, and then
-quietly slipped away.
-
-When the young bird began to feel hungry he cried out; but nobody came.
-Then he looked over at the raspberries, and reached out and tried to
-get hold of one. After trying three or four times, and nearly pitching
-off his perch, he did reach one. Then how proud he was!
-
-The father stayed away an hour or more, and before he came back that
-young woodpecker had learned to help himself very well; though the
-minute his father came, he began to flutter his wings and beg to be fed,
-as if he were half starved.
-
-A lady, who fed the wild birds on her window sill for many years, and
-watched their ways, says she often saw the old birds teaching their
-little ones. They showed them where the food was to be found, and, she
-says, regularly taught them the art of eating.
-
-Then she saw them taught to be afraid of people, not to come too near
-her. And once she saw an old bird showing a young one how to gather
-twigs for nest-building. The young one looked on a while, and then tried
-hard to do it himself, but could not get off a single twig.
-
-Best of all, the same lady heard an old robin giving a music lesson. The
-teacher would sing a few notes and then stop, while the pupil tried to
-copy them. He had a weak, babyish sort of voice, and did not succeed
-very well at first.
-
-I have heard several birds at their music lessons.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-SOME OF HIS LESSONS
-
-
-IT is very easy to catch the birds teaching their little ones to
-exercise their wings and to fly together. You will see the young birds
-sitting quietly on fences or trees, when all at once the parents begin
-to fly around, with strange loud calls. In a minute every youngster will
-fly out and join them. Around and around they all go, hard as they can,
-till their little wings are tired, and then they come down and alight
-again.
-
-Once I saw a young bird who did not go when his parents called. All the
-others flew around many times, and I suppose that young one thought he
-would not be noticed.
-
-But mothers' eyes are sharp, and his mother saw him. So when she came
-back, she flew right at her naughty son, and knocked him off his perch.
-The next time she called, he flew with the rest. This was a crow mother.
-
-I have seen a bluebird just out of the nest, taught to follow his
-father in this way. He stood on a small tree, crying for something to
-eat, when his father came in sight with a beakful of food. He did not
-feed him, but flew past him, so close that he almost touched him, and
-alighted on the next tree, a little beyond him.
-
-[Illustration: BLUEBIRD]
-
-The little bluebird saw the food, and at once flew after it, perched
-beside his father, and was fed. Then the old bird left him, and in a few
-minutes he felt hungry, and began to call again.
-
-I kept close watch, and soon the father came and did the same thing
-over. He flew past the young one with an insect in plain sight in his
-beak, and perched on another tree still farther along in the way he
-wanted the little one to go.
-
-The hungry baby followed, and was fed as before. In this way he was led
-to a big tree the other side of the yard, where the rest of the family
-were, and where they all spent the night.
-
-An old robin wanted to teach her young one to bathe. She brought him to
-a dish of water kept for their use by some people who were fond of
-birds. The little one stood on the edge and watched his mother go in,
-and splash and scatter the water. He fluttered his wings, and was
-eager to try it for himself, but seemed afraid to plunge in.
-
-At last the mother flew away and left him standing there, and in a
-moment came back with a worm in her mouth. The young robin was hungry,
-as young birds always are, and when he saw the worm, he began to flutter
-his wings, and cry for it.
-
-But the mother jumped into the middle of the water dish, and stood
-there, holding the worm in his sight. The youngster wanted the worm so
-much that he seemed to forget his fear of the water, and hopped right in
-beside her. She fed him, and then began to splash about, and he liked it
-so well that he stayed and took a good bath.
-
-Birds, as these stories show, teach their little ones by coaxing, and
-not by driving them.
-
-An Englishman, Mr. Lloyd Morgan, once had some ducks and chickens
-hatched away from their mother, to see how much their parents had to
-teach them.
-
-He found that these little orphans had to be taught to pick up their
-food, and to know what is good to eat. He had to show the young ducks
-how to dive, and teach all of them that water is good to drink.
-
-To see if chickens had to be taught the hen language, he put them out
-by their mother when they were a few days old.
-
-The hen was going about with her brood, all brothers and sisters of Mr.
-Morgan's chicks, and she was quite ready to adopt the new ones. She
-clucked and called to them with all her might, but they did not come.
-They acted as if they did not hear her. When the others ran and crept
-under her wings to be brooded, the strangers looked on, but did not
-think of going too.
-
-They did not understand the calls or the ways of their own mother. They
-had not been taught.
-
-A careful watcher will see the birds teach these things, and many others
-as interesting. But no one will see anything unless he is quiet, and
-does not frighten them.
-
-
-
-
-THE BIRD GROWN UP
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-THE BIRD'S LANGUAGE
-
-
-WHEN the bird is grown up, there are many other interesting things to
-know about him,--one is, whether he can talk.
-
-It is plain to those who have studied the ways of birds, that they are
-able to tell things to each other, and many writers have said plainly
-that birds have a language.
-
-If you notice birds in cages, you will find that when two or more of a
-kind are in the same room, you will hear little chirps and twitters and
-other notes, not at all like their song. But if one is alone in a room,
-he hardly makes a sound except when singing.
-
-Then see a robin out of doors. He is less afraid of us than most birds,
-and easiest to watch. If something comes up on him suddenly, he gives a
-sharp note of surprise. If a cat appears, he has another cry which every
-one can understand, a word of warning to all. If everything is quiet and
-his mate is near, he will greet her with some low, sweet notes.
-
-When a partridge mother sees danger, she gives one call, which all her
-brood know, and at once run and hide. When the hen speaks to her chicks,
-they know well whether it means to come to her, or to run away.
-
-Of course birds do not use our words. When it is said that the quail
-says "Bob White," it is meant that his call sounds like those words. To
-some the notes sound like "more wet." One may call it almost anything,
-like "all right" or "too hot."
-
-You will read in books about birds, that a certain warbler says "Witches
-here," or that the white-throated sparrow says "Old Sam Peabody," and
-other birds say still different things. The writer means that the words
-remind one of the bird's notes, and so it is useful to know them,
-because it helps you to know the bird when you hear him.
-
-I have many times seen birds act as if they were talking to each other.
-You can often see the city sparrows do so.
-
-There is nothing in a bird's ways that we like so well as his singing.
-And in all the many species of birds in the world, no two sing exactly
-alike, so far as I can find out. You may always know a bird by his song.
-A robin does not sing like a thrush or a catbird. And what is more, not
-one of the sounds he utters is like those made by any other bird. If you
-know him well, whatever noise he makes, you will know at once that it is
-a robin.
-
-But there is something still more curious about it. No robin sings
-exactly like another robin. When you come to know one bird well, you can
-tell his song from any other bird's. Of course, all robins sing enough
-alike for one to know that it is a robin song, but if you listen
-closely, you will see that it is really different from all others.
-
-Persons who have kept birds in cages have noticed the same thing.
-
-There is still another point to know. One bird does not always sing the
-same song. I have heard a song sparrow sing five or six different songs,
-standing all the time in plain sight on a fence. In the same way I have
-known a meadowlark to make six changes in his few notes.
-
-Besides their own natural songs, many birds like to copy the notes of
-others. Our mockingbird is very fond of learning new things, and he does
-not always choose songs either.
-
-He will imitate the noise of filing a saw, or the pop of a cork, as
-readily as the sweetest song. I have heard one sing the canary's song
-better than the canary himself.
-
-[Illustration: INDIGO-BIRD]
-
-Other birds can do the same. A common English sparrow picked up in the
-streets of a big city, hurt, and not able to fly, was put into a room
-with a canary.
-
-No doubt the wild bird found his life in a cage rather dull, after
-having been used to the streets, and he soon began to amuse himself
-trying to do as the canary did, to sing. In a few weeks he learned the
-whole song, and he could sing it even better than his roommate, for his
-voice was full and rich, and not so shrill as the canary's.
-
-Most people think that birds sing all summer. They think so because they
-have not taken notice. We who are very fond of bird song know it is not
-so.
-
-Singing begins when the birds first come in the spring. It goes on while
-the nest is being built, and the mother bird is sitting. The father has
-little to do at that time, and so he sings. And besides, he seems to be
-so happy that he cannot help it.
-
-But when little ones begin to call for food, he has to be very busy, and
-does not have so much time for music. Some birds stop singing as soon as
-they go to feeding.
-
-But not all do so. Many go on singing till they begin to change their
-clothes, or to moult, as it is called. This happens in August or
-September, and when it begins, a bird seems to lose his voice.
-
-One of the first to stop singing is the bobolink. He is rarely heard
-after June is past. The veery is another whose singing days are over
-early. You may hear his call in the woods, if you know it, but not a
-song will you hear after the middle of July.
-
-By the time August comes in, almost every bird is silent, except for his
-calls or "talk." The birds to be heard then are the red-eyed vireo, who
-seems never to tire, and now and then the indigo-bird, or the wood
-pewee, and best of all, the dear little song sparrow, who keeps up his
-cheery songs till the very last.
-
-Then you will know that all the birds are busy putting on their new
-suits for their long journey.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-WHAT HE EATS
-
-
-WHAT the bird eats and where he gets his food are useful things for us
-to know. It has only lately been found out that birds are the most
-valuable of helpers to us.
-
-What we cannot eat ourselves, they are happy to live on, and things that
-make us a great deal of trouble are their daily food.
-
-Some of the things they are fond of are little animals, like mice and
-ground squirrels, that eat our crops. Others are insects which spoil our
-fruit and eat up our vegetables, cankerworms and cutworms, and a hundred
-more.
-
-Besides these, many birds eat the seeds of certain weeds that farmers
-have to fight all the time.
-
-One reason this helps us so greatly is that birds eat much more for
-their size than we do. A boy of six or eight years could not possibly
-eat a whole sheep in one day, but a young bird can easily eat more than
-his own weight every day.
-
-They want more than three meals too. They need to eat very often. One
-catbird will take thirty grasshoppers for his breakfast, and in a few
-hours he will want thirty more. So he destroys a great many in a day.
-
-Birds begin eating long before we are out of bed, and keep it up till
-night comes again, or as long as they can see.
-
-You must not think the birds are greedy, as a person would be if he ate
-every few minutes all day. They are made to do so. It is their business
-to destroy insects, small animals, and weeds that trouble us so much,
-and the more they eat the better for us.
-
-Let us see where they go for food. Each bird has his own place to work.
-
-The catbird watches the fruit-trees, and all day long eats insects that
-are spoiling our fruit or killing the trees. When the cherries are ripe,
-we should not forget that he has saved the fruit from insects, and has
-well earned a share for himself.
-
-If you spent days and weeks picking off insects, would you not think you
-had earned part of the fruit? "For every cherry he eats" (says a man who
-has watched him), "he has eaten at least one thousand insects."
-
-The robin eats great numbers of cankerworms, which destroy our apples,
-and cutworms, which kill the corn.
-
-The bluebird sits on the fence keeping sharp watch, and every few
-minutes flies down and picks up a grasshopper or a cricket, or some such
-grass-eating insect.
-
-Woodpeckers hunt over the trunks and limbs of trees. They tap on the
-bark and listen, and if they hear a grub stir inside, they cut a hole in
-the bark and drag it out. The downy is fond of insects that infest our
-apple-trees, and he makes many holes in the trunks. But it does not hurt
-the trees. It is good for them, for it takes away the creatures that
-were eating them.
-
-Orioles go over the fruit-trees, and pick out tiny insects under the
-leaves, and when they find great nests on the branches, they tear them
-open and kill the caterpillars that made them.
-
-Little warblers, such as the pretty summer yellow-bird, help to keep our
-trees clear, doing most of their work in the tops, where we can hardly
-see them.
-
-Swallows fly about in the air, catching mosquitoes and tiny flies that
-trouble us.
-
-Very useful to us are the birds who feed upon dead animals, such as the
-turkey buzzards, who may be seen any day in our Southern States,
-soaring about high in the air, looking for their food.
-
-What they eat is so very unpleasant to us that we are apt to despise the
-birds. But we should cherish and feel grateful to them instead. For they
-are doing us the greatest kindness. In many of the hot countries people
-could not live, if these most useful birds were killed.
-
-Some persons think buzzards find their food by seeing it, and others are
-just as sure that they smell it. Perhaps they use both senses.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-MORE ABOUT HIS FOOD
-
-
-SOME of the big birds work all the time for us. When you see a hawk
-sitting very still on a dead limb, what do you suppose he is doing?
-
-A good deal of the time he is looking on the ground for a mouse, or a
-ground squirrel, or a rat, or some creature that he likes to eat.
-
-When he sees one of them move in the grass, he flies down and pounces
-upon it. Thus he helps the farmer greatly, for all of these little
-animals destroy crops.
-
-When it grows dark, hawks stop work and go to sleep. Then the owls, who
-can see better in the dusk, come out of the holes where they have been
-half sleeping all day. They hunt the same little creatures, most of all
-rats and mice, which like best to run about in the night.
-
-Perhaps you have heard that hawks and owls carry off chickens. Many
-people who keep chickens shoot every hawk and owl they see. But if they
-knew more about them they would not do so. Only two of the common hawks
-and one owl[1] disturb chickens. All the others kill thousands of the
-little animals that give the farmers so much trouble.
-
-Owls have a curious way of eating mice. They swallow them whole, and
-after a while they throw up a queer-looking little ball made of the
-bones and fur of the mouse.
-
-You may some time have seen a long-legged heron walking about on the
-seashore or in the salt marsh. Now and then he would thrust his long,
-sharp bill into something, and lift up his head and swallow. Or you have
-noticed a little sandpiper running along on the beach or the bank of a
-river.
-
-The heron was probably eating frogs or fish, and the sandpiper some of
-the small sea creatures thrown up by the waves. If these were not taken
-away they would be very bad for us, and perhaps make us sick.
-
-Not less useful to us than these birds are the whole family of finches.
-The goldfinch in bright yellow coat, the purple finch in red, and the
-sparrows in plain brown. All of these are fond of seeds as well as
-insects, and most of all they like the seeds of some weeds that are hard
-to get rid of.
-
-The goldfinch is called the thistle-bird, because he likes best the
-seeds of thistles, though he eats the beggar's-ticks too.
-
-The chipping sparrow, the little red-headed bird who comes about our
-doors, eats the seeds of fox-tail and crab grasses, that spoil our
-lawns.
-
-The white-throated sparrow, a large and very pretty bird, eats the seeds
-of smartweed and ragweed. Other finches like bittersweet, sorrel, and
-amaranth, all of which we are glad to have them eat.
-
-The seed-eating birds can find their food in winter, even when snow
-covers the ground, because the dead weeds hold on to their seeds, and
-the snow is not often deep enough to cover them.
-
-Some birds gather their food in the fall, and hide it away where they
-can find it in winter. Blue jays collect acorns and beech-nuts, and
-store them in a hole in a tree, or some other safe place, to eat when
-food is scarce. A woodpecker who lives in the West picks holes in the
-bark of a tree, and puts an acorn into each one.
-
-The oddest store I know of was made by a woodpecker. He found a long
-crack in a post, and stuffed it full of live grasshoppers. He did not
-like dead grasshoppers. He wedged them into the crack so tightly that
-they could not get out, and I do not know that they wanted to. When
-grasshoppers were scarce in the fields, he came day after day to his
-queer storehouse, till he had eaten every one.
-
-One of the woodpecker family who lives in Mexico stores nuts and acorns
-in the stems of plants. These stems are hollow and made in joints like
-bamboo. The bird cuts a hole at the upper end of a joint, and stuffs it
-full. When he wants his nuts, he cuts a hole at the lower end of the
-joint and pulls them out.
-
-I once had a tame blue jay, who was fond of saving what he could not
-eat, and putting it safely away. The place he seemed to think most
-secure was somewhere about me, and he would come slyly around me as I
-sat at work, and try to hide his treasure about my clothes.
-
-When it was a dried currant or bit of bread, I did not care; but when he
-came on to my shoulder, and tried to tuck a dead meal worm into my hair
-or between my lips, or a piece of raw beef under a ruffle or in my ear,
-I had to decline to be used as a storehouse, much to his grief.
-
-He liked to put away other things as well as food. Matches he seemed to
-think were made for him to hide. His chosen place for them was between
-the breadths of matting on the floor.
-
-Once he found a parlor match, hunted up a good opening, and put it in.
-Then he went on, as he always did, to hammer it down so tightly that it
-would stay. One of the blows of his hard beak struck the lighting end of
-the match, and it went off with a sharp crack. The noise and the flame
-which burst out made the bird jump three feet, and scared him nearly out
-of his senses.
-
-After that I took care to keep the matches out of the way of a bird so
-fond of hiding things.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] Cooper's and sharp-shinned hawks, and great horned or hoot owl.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-WHERE HE SLEEPS
-
-
-MOST birds sleep on their feet.
-
-You know how a canary goes to sleep, all puffed out like a ball, with
-his head buried in the feathers of his shoulder. He may stick his bill
-over behind the top of the wing, but he never "puts his head under his
-wing," as you have heard.
-
-Sometimes he stands straight up on one leg, with the other drawn up out
-of sight in his feathers, but more often he sits down on the perch,
-still resting on his feet. Most wild birds of the perching kind sleep in
-the same way.
-
-It is only lately that we have begun to find out where birds sleep,
-because it is dark when they go to bed, and they get up before it is
-light enough for us to see them.
-
-The only way to catch them in bed is to go out in the evening, and start
-them up after they have gone to sleep. And this is not very kind to the
-poor little birds. Some men who are trying to learn about the habits of
-birds have tried this way, and so have found out some of their
-sleeping-places.
-
-One thing they have learned is that the nest is not often used for a
-bed, except for the mother, while she is sitting and keeping her little
-ones warm.
-
-Robins and orioles, and others, creep into the thick branches of an
-evergreen tree, close up to the trunk. Some crawl under the edge of a
-haystack, others into thick vines or thorny bushes. All these are meant
-for hiding-places, so that beasts which prowl about at night, and like
-to eat birds, will not find them.
-
-Tree sparrows like to sleep in holes in the ground like little caves.
-The men who found these cosy little bedrooms think they are places dug
-out by field mice, and other small animals, for their own use. And when
-they are left, the birds are glad to take them.
-
-When the weather is cold, some birds sleep under the snow. You may think
-that would not be very warm, and it is not so warm as a bed in the house
-with plenty of blankets. But it is much warmer than a perch in a tree,
-with nothing but leaves to keep off the wind.
-
-While the snow is falling, some birds find it as good as blankets for
-their use. Grouse, who live on the ground, dive into a snow-bank, and
-snuggle down quietly, while the snow falls and covers them all over, and
-keeps the cold wind off. Air comes through the snow, so they do not
-smother.
-
-Some birds creep into a pile of brush that is covered with snow, and
-find under the twigs little places like tents, where the snow has been
-kept out by the twigs, and they sleep there, away from the wind and
-storm outside.
-
-Water birds find the best sleeping-places on the water, where they float
-all night like tiny boats. Some of them leave one foot hanging down and
-paddling a little, while they sleep, to keep from being washed to the
-shore.
-
-Bob-white and his family sleep in a close circle on the ground, all with
-their heads turned outward, so that they can see or hear an enemy,
-whichever way he comes.
-
-Hawks and eagles are said to sleep standing, never sitting on the feet
-like a canary. Some ducks and geese do even more: they sleep standing on
-one foot. Woodpeckers and chimney swifts hang themselves up by their
-claws, using their stiff tail for a brace, as if it were a third leg.
-
-Some birds, like the crows, sleep in great flocks. They agree upon a
-piece of woods, and all the crows for miles around come there every
-night. Sometimes thousands sleep in this one bedroom, called a crow
-roost. Robins do the same, after the young are big enough to fly so far.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN ROBIN]
-
-Audubon, who has told us so much about birds, once found a hollow tree
-which was the sleeping-room of chimney swifts. The noise they made going
-out in the morning was like the roar of a great mill-wheel.
-
-He wanted to see the birds asleep. So in the daytime, when they were
-away, he had a piece cut out at the foot of the tree, big enough to let
-him in, and then put back, so the birds would not notice anything
-unusual.
-
-At night, after the swifts were abed, he took a dark lantern and went
-in. He turned the light upon them little by little, so as not to startle
-them. Then he saw the whole inside of the tree full of birds. They were
-hanging by their claws, side by side, as thick as they could hang. He
-thought there were as many as twelve thousand in that one bedroom.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-HIS TRAVELS
-
-
-MOST of our birds take two long journeys every year, one in the fall to
-the south, and the other in the spring back to the north. These journeys
-are called "migrations."
-
-The birds do not go all at once, but in many cases those of a kind who
-live near each other collect in a flock and travel together. Each
-species or kind has its own time to go.
-
-It might be thought that it is because of the cold that so many birds
-move to a warmer climate. But it is not so; they are very well dressed
-to endure cold. Their feather suits are so warm that some of our
-smallest and weakest birds are able to stay with us, like the chickadee
-and the golden-crowned kinglet. It is simply because they cannot get
-food in winter, that they have to go.
-
-The fall travel begins soon after the first of July. The bobolink is one
-of the first to leave us, though he does not start at once on his long
-journey. By that time his little folk are full grown, and can take care
-of themselves, and he is getting on his winter suit, or moulting.
-
-Then some morning all the bobolinks in the country are turned out of
-their homes in the meadows, by men and horses and mowing-machines, for
-at that time the long grass is ready to cut.
-
-Then he begins to think about the wild rice which is getting just right
-to eat. Besides, he likes to take his long journey to South America in
-an easy way, stopping here and there as he goes. So some morning we miss
-his cheerful call, and if we go to the meadow we shall not be able to
-see a single bobolink.
-
-There, too, are the swallows, who eat only small flying insects. As the
-weather grows cooler, these tiny flies are no longer to be found. So the
-swallows begin to flock, as it is called. For a few days they will be
-seen on fences and telegraph wires, chattering and making a great noise,
-and then some morning they will all be gone.
-
-They spend some time in marshes, and other lonely places, before they at
-last set out for the south.
-
-As the days grow shorter and cooler, the warblers go. These are the
-bright-colored little fellows, who live mostly in the tops of trees.
-Then the orioles and the thrushes and the cuckoos leave us, and most
-birds who live on insects.
-
-By the time that November comes in, few of them will be left. Birds who
-can live on seeds and winter berries, such as cedar-berries and
-partridge-berries, and others, often stay with us,--bluebirds, finches,
-and sometimes robins.
-
-Many birds take their journey by night. Think of it! Tiny creatures,
-that all summer go to bed at dark, start off some night, when it seems
-as if they ought to be asleep, and fly all night in the dark.
-
-When it grows light, they stop in some place where they can feed and
-rest. And the next night, or two or three nights later, they go on
-again. So they do till they reach their winter home, hundreds or
-thousands of miles away.
-
-These night flyers are the timid birds, and those who live in the woods,
-and do not like to be seen,--thrushes, wrens, vireos, and others. Birds
-with strong wings, who are used to flying hours every day, and bolder
-birds, who do not mind being seen, take their journey by daylight.
-
-Most of them stop now and then, a day or two at a time, to feed and
-rest. They fly very high, and faster than our railroad trains can go.
-
-In the spring the birds take their second long journey, back to their
-last year's home.
-
-How they know their way on these journeys, men have been for many years
-trying to find out. They have found that birds travel on regular roads,
-or routes, that follow the rivers and the shore of the ocean. They can
-see much better than we can, and even in the night they can see water.
-
-One such road, or highway, is over the harbor of New York. When the
-statue of Liberty was set up on an island in the harbor a few years ago,
-it was put in the birds' path.
-
-Usually they fly too high to mind it; but when there is a rain or fog
-they come much lower, and, sad to say, many of them fly against it and
-are killed.
-
-We often see strange birds in our city streets and parks, while they are
-passing through on their migrations, for they sometimes spend several
-days with us.
-
-A sparrow, who was hurt and unable to fly, was picked up one fall and
-kept in a house all winter. He was not caged, and he chose for his
-headquarters and sleeping-place a vase that stood on a shelf.
-
-He went with the family to the table, and made himself very much at home
-there. He picked out what he wanted to eat and drink, and scolded well
-if he did not have it.
-
-The thing he liked best was butter, and when he was ready to wipe his
-bill after eating, as birds do, he found the coat-sleeve of the master
-soft and nice for the purpose. This pleased the bird better than it did
-the owner of the sleeve, but he tried in vain to keep the saucy fellow
-off. If he forgot for an instant to watch the bird, he would dash up,
-wipe off the butter, and fly away out of the reach of everybody.
-
-In the spring the sparrow left the family, and lived out of doors. But,
-with the first cold weather of fall, he came back, went to his old vase,
-and settled himself for the winter again. This he did for several
-years.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-HIS WINTER HOME
-
-
-NEARLY every bird has two homes, one for winter and one for summer.
-
-We can see why birds leave us and go to a warmer and better place for
-the winter; but why they do not stay in that country where there is
-always plenty of food, but choose to come back in the spring to their
-old home, we do not know.
-
-It may be because they want more room to build nests, and bring up their
-little ones. Or it may be that they want to come back because they love
-their old home.
-
-Whatever may be the reason, it is well for us that they do so, for if we
-had no more birds in the summer than we have in the winter, we should
-suffer very much from insects. We could not raise fruit, or vegetables,
-or grain, for insects would eat it all. That is one reason we are so
-glad that birds come back to us in the spring.
-
-Though so many birds leave us in the fall, they do not all go. A few
-come to us who have nested farther north, and some who have been with us
-all summer stay over winter too. These last are called "permanent
-residents," that is, they stay all the year round.
-
-In the Middle States of the East--New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
-and Ohio--there are twenty or twenty-five who stay all the year. There
-are several hawks and owls and woodpeckers, the crow, bob-white, the
-blue jay, and the meadowlark, and, of the little ones, the goldfinch, in
-his sober winter coat, his cousin the purple finch, the song sparrow,
-the nuthatch, and the chickadee.
-
-Besides these "permanent residents," there are ten or twelve who come
-from the north. The funny little saw-whet owl is one, and the snowflake,
-who loves to frolic in the snow, is another.
-
-Many of our summer birds stay in the Southern States all winter. Those
-who can eat seeds and winter berries--for instance, robins and
-bluebirds, catbirds and sparrows--need not go very far south; and some
-of them even stay in the State of New York.
-
-Most of our birds who do not eat berries, but must have insects, go
-farther, some to Florida or the West Indies, others to Central America,
-and a few even into South America,--except the woodpecker, who gets his
-insects under the bark of trees.
-
-The summer birds of the Western States nearly all go to Mexico for the
-winter.
-
-The little birds who stay with us are only those who can eat seeds, as I
-said, or the eggs and insects to be found in the crevices of the bark on
-trees. These birds do a great deal of good, for each one destroys
-thousands of insects before they have come out of the egg. One small
-chickadee will eat several hundred insect eggs in a day.
-
-These little fellows can almost always find their food, for the snow
-seldom covers the trunks of the trees; but now and then in the winter we
-have an ice storm; then the trunks and branches are buried under ice, so
-that the birds suffer, and perhaps will starve to death.
-
-In such a time it will be kind of you who live in the country to put out
-food for them. You can give them any table scraps of meat or vegetables,
-or bread, chopped fine for their tiny mouths, with corn or grain for
-bigger birds.
-
-What they all like best to eat is suet,--which the butcher will give
-you,--chopped fine, or, better still, nailed or tied to a branch or a
-fence, so that they can pick off morsels for themselves. This will make
-them all very happy; but you must see that the English sparrow does not
-drive them away, or eat it all himself.
-
-Some persons who live in the country or small towns spread a table every
-day through the winter for the birds. Many come for food, and they have
-great pleasure in watching them and studying their ways.
-
-One lady I know who is an invalid, and her greatest happiness in the
-long cold months, when she cannot go out, is to set her breakfast-table,
-and watch the guests who come to it.
-
-She lives in the southern part of Ohio, and she has all winter cardinal
-grosbeaks, or redbirds as she calls them, blue jays, tufted titmice, and
-others. The cardinals are fine singers, and they sing to her every month
-in the year.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS
-
-
-MANY people think that as soon as the young birds of a nest are full
-grown, and know how to take care of themselves, the family separate, and
-have no more to do with each other. Some have even said that the old
-birds push the little ones out of the nest to get rid of them.
-
-All this is a great mistake, and any one who has watched them carefully
-will say so.
-
-In many cases, when the brood is grown and all have left the nest, the
-whole family keep together. One who has eyes sharp to see will find
-everywhere little groups of parents with their young. If the old birds
-rear more than one brood in a summer, the young ones of the first nest
-keep together.
-
-I have often seen little parties of young bluebirds or sparrows going
-about after food on the grass, or on the newly cut hay. Now and then one
-of the parents would come around as if to see that all was well, and
-then leave them alone again. When the second brood is ready to go out,
-the whole family often unite in a small flock. In some cases, where they
-could be watched, they have been known to stay so all winter. All
-through July and August, in the New England and Middle States, one may
-see these pretty little family groups.
-
-Some birds who live and nest by themselves, each pair in its own tree,
-or bush, or field, come together in larger parties after the young are
-grown, in a social way. A few do this only at night, in what are called
-roosts, which I spoke of in a former chapter.
-
-Other birds, when nestlings are out, unite in flocks, and stay so all
-the time, or through the winter. Our pretty little goldfinch does this.
-
-Most of the birds we see about our homes like to have a tree or bush to
-themselves for their nest. But there are many birds that live close
-together all the time. Some, you may say, in small villages,--swallows,
-for instance. We generally see several swallows flying about together.
-They make their nests near each other. The barn swallow chooses the
-beams inside the barn, and there are often three or four or more nests
-in the same barn.
-
-The eave swallows put their mud cottages in a row, under the eaves
-outside the barn. One would think they needed to have numbers on their
-doors, to know which was their own.
-
-There, too, are the common crow blackbirds. They come in the spring in
-crowds, and when it is time to make nests, they find some grove or clump
-of trees that suits them, and all of them build their nests close
-together. Often there are two or three on one tree, like a bird city.
-There they live and rear their little ones, and it is said they never
-quarrel.
-
-Then there are the birds who get their food from the sea, such as
-penguins. These birds live in big cities, of many thousand nests. They
-go to an island where no people live, and build on the ground, or on
-rocks, or anywhere.
-
-Sometimes they are so near together one can hardly walk without stepping
-on them. How each mother can tell her own, it is hard to see. They live
-very happily together, and if a mother is killed, so that her little
-ones are left orphans, one of the neighbors will adopt them all, and
-feed and bring them up with her own.
-
-Some of these birds do not even take the trouble to make a nest. They
-put the eggs anywhere on the sand or earth.
-
-Some one, Mr. Brehm, I think, tells a pretty story about a certain kind
-of duck who rears two broods every season. After the ducklings of the
-first brood have learned to take care of themselves, they go about
-together, getting their food and sailing on the water in a little party,
-while their parents are hatching the second brood. But when the younger
-ones are big enough, they are led to the water, and at once their elder
-brothers and sisters join them. They all swim around together, the
-youngest in the middle of the group, where they are protected and fed by
-the elder brood as well as by the parents, a lovely and united little
-family.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-HIS KINDNESS TO OTHERS
-
-
-BIRDS are helpful to each other when in trouble. If a robin is in
-distress, other robins will come to see what is the matter, and to help
-if they can. And not only robins, but catbirds, and orioles, and
-chickadees, and others, will come, too.
-
-Sometimes when a person tries to rob a nest, all the birds near will
-come in a crowd, to drive away the thief. They will cry and scream at
-him, and sometimes fly at his face, and try to peck his eyes.
-
-Birds are so little they cannot fight a man, but if they can peck at his
-face, they can hurt him, and if they really get at his eyes, they can
-put them out. We cannot blame the birds for trying to protect themselves
-and their young, and it is well for boys to be careful how they disturb
-a nest.
-
-One proof that birds really do help each other is the fact that when a
-man wants to know what birds live in a place, he can bring them all
-around him by making a sound like a young bird in distress. All who hear
-it will come to see what is the matter.
-
-Let me tell you a story of some young swallows. They were able to fly a
-little, and were sitting together on a roof, when a lady who was
-watching them noticed that one of them seemed to be weak, and not able
-to stand up.
-
-When the parents came with food, the others stood up and opened their
-mouths, and so were fed, but this little one hardly ever got a morsel.
-
-If birds had no love for each other, as many people think, these strong
-little ones would not have cared if their brother did starve; but what
-did the lady see? She says that two of the strong young swallows came
-close up to their weak brother, one on each side. They put their beaks
-under his breast and lifted him up on to his legs, and then crowded so
-close against him that their little bodies propped him up, and held him
-there; so that he had his chance of being fed as well as they.
-
-Many times birds have been seen who were blind or old, or who had a wing
-or a leg broken, or were in some way hurt so that they could not take
-care of themselves, and who were being waited upon by other birds, fed,
-and led to the water to drink and bathe.
-
-[Illustration: CHEWINK, OR TOWHEE]
-
-Birds have been found caught in the lining of a nest, so that they were
-held there and could not go for food. They had been there for weeks, and
-would have starved to death if they had not been fed. Yet they were so
-well taken care of by other birds that they were strong and able to fly.
-
-In one case, where the nest was in a tree trunk, the hole in the trunk
-had grown up, so that when big enough to fly, they could not get out,
-and they had been there for months. Yet when a man cut open the trunk
-and let them out, they were well and lively, proving that they had been
-fed by friends outside all that time.
-
-I could tell you many true stories of the kind care of birds for each
-other, and for baby birds who had lost their parents, or been stolen
-away from them.
-
-A gentleman in Massachusetts told me that when he was a boy he saw a
-small flock of chewinks who came about a house where food was put out
-for birds. They came every day, and he soon saw that one was bigger than
-the rest, and that he never tried to pick up anything for himself, but
-all the others fed him.
-
-One day he was cruel enough to throw a stone at the bird who was so well
-taken care of, and when he took up his victim, he found that the
-upper and lower parts of his bill were crossed, so that he could not
-pick up anything from the ground, where chewinks find their food. He had
-been born thus deformed, and if he had not been fed every day by his
-friends he must have starved to death. Yet so well had he been cared for
-that he was better grown than any of the others.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-HIS AFFECTIONS
-
-
-I AM sure I need not say that father and mother birds love their little
-ones.
-
-So much does the mother love her nestlings that she is often willing to
-die for them. Orioles and chickadees will let themselves be caught in
-the hand of one who has taken their young, rather than desert them.
-
-Some birds live in our chimneys, generally in a flue that is not in use,
-and are called chimney swifts. If a chimney takes fire the mother swift
-tries hard to get her little ones out, but if they cannot fly, she has
-been seen to fly into the fire herself, and die with them.
-
-Robins have been found frozen to death on their nest. They could easily
-have saved themselves, but they would not leave their young ones to
-perish. A ground bird has been known to sit on her nest during a
-freezing storm, till she died, rather than go and leave her little ones
-to suffer.
-
-Once when a young cedar-bird was caught and carried off, the father
-followed it for miles, crying and showing so much distress that the man
-who had stolen it was sorry for him, and let the little one go.
-
-Every one who has watched them knows that birds love their mates. A man
-once shot a sea bird, when her mate came about him, crying and showing
-his grief as well as if he could speak.
-
-I could easily fill a book with stories to prove that birds are loving
-to their mates and young, and all of them true.
-
-It does not seem strange that birds are fond of their own, but they love
-others also. And not only other birds, but even animals like cats, dogs,
-and horses sometimes.
-
-I once had an English goldfinch in the house. He was a little fellow,
-not so big as a canary, and he was very fond of another bird in the
-room. This was a scarlet tanager, who was much larger than himself.
-
-The small bird showed his love for his red friend, just as people show
-love, by staying close to him, singing to him, and driving away any bird
-who came too near.
-
-A lady once told me this story showing the love of a pigeon for a cat.
-The cat was fond of lying on the broad window sill. When the pigeon saw
-her there, he would fly down, and alight beside her. Then he would press
-up close to her, and rub against her fur, as if glad to see her, and the
-cat seemed to enjoy it as much as the bird.
-
-[Illustration: HOUSE WREN]
-
-Often a bird who is tamed loves his human friends. A man had a crow who
-was very fond of him. He had reared the bird from the nest and never
-shut him up, but let him fly about wherever he chose.
-
-One day he was out in a sudden rain, and his feathers got wet, so that
-he could not fly well. Then a boy caught him, and carried him seven
-miles away. He clipped one wing, so that the crow could not fly, and
-kept him shut in the house all winter. In the spring, the first time he
-could get out, the bird started for his old home.
-
-He could not fly, but he walked the seven miles, through mud and wet,
-and came home so tired that he was almost dead. When his master saw him
-coming he went to meet him, took him up and petted him, and talked to
-him.
-
-The poor fellow was so happy it seemed as if he could not live. But he
-was taken care of, and got well, and lived many years. But never after
-that would he leave the place, though when his new feathers came in he
-could fly as well as ever.
-
-Canary birds often love their mistresses. I have heard of one who was so
-grieved by a harsh word, that in a few minutes he fell off his perch
-dead.
-
-These true stories show us how tender and loving these little creatures
-are, and how careful we should be to treat them gently and kindly.
-
-An interesting and true story is told by a clergyman in Ohio. It is a
-habit of wrens to find a good nesting-place, and then look for a mate to
-occupy it. One spring a wren chose a nice bird-box on his place, and
-held it ready for the expected bride. But she did not come, and a pair
-of English sparrows took a fancy to the same house.
-
-Sparrows expect to get what they want, and are always ready to fight for
-it, so they gave battle to the wren. But wrens also will fight for their
-own, and this wren held his house against the enemy for two weeks. Still
-the mate did not appear, and finally the lonely bird lost heart, and let
-the sparrows set up house-keeping in his box, though he did not go away.
-
-When the young sparrows were hatched, and feeding began, the wren
-suddenly became friendly. He hunted up small green worms, probably such
-as are good for wrenlings, and offered them to the young sparrows.
-
-Nestlings are never known to refuse anything to eat, and wren food
-seemed to suit the sparrows, for they soon outgrew the nursery.
-
-All summer this queer thing went on. The sparrows reared three or four
-broods, and the wren did his full share of the work,--and not only of
-feeding the young, but of repairing and rebuilding the nest for each
-fresh brood.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-HIS INTELLIGENCE
-
-
-BEFORE people knew very much about the ways of birds, it was thought
-that they did not have to be taught anything, but that they knew
-everything they needed to know, as soon as they were born. That is, they
-were said to act from instinct alone, and not at all from reason, as we
-do.
-
-Another notion that people had was that birds of a kind were just alike;
-that they looked exactly like each other, all acted in the same way, and
-all sang the same song.
-
-But since we have begun to study birds more closely, we find these
-things are not true. We find that birds learn things by being taught, as
-we do. Also, they find out how to do things themselves, and they are not
-all alike, as so many machines.
-
-More than this, we see that they do not look nor act exactly like each
-other. For when we know one robin or one oriole well, we can tell him
-from any other robin or oriole. And, as I said before, no two of a kind
-sing precisely the same song.
-
-A bird shows his intelligence in many ways. One is by the way he acts
-when he cannot do as he is used to doing. A robin I know of wished to
-build a nest, but could not find mud to put into it, for it was a very
-dry time, and there were no streams near. Now a robin's nest must have
-mud, and the bird seemed puzzled for a while. But at last she thought of
-a way to get it.
-
-She went to a bathing-dish that the people of the house kept filled with
-water for the birds, jumped into it, and got her legs very wet. Then she
-flew to the road, and tramped around in the dust and dirt.
-
-In a short time her legs had a good coating of mud, which she carefully
-picked off with her bill, and took to the nest she was building.
-
-This she did a great many times, and the lady who told me of it watched
-her till she had as much mud as she needed.
-
-A bird often shows sense by the way she repairs a nest that has been
-thrown out of place. Sometimes she will add a new stay, tying the nest
-to a stronger limb. One sparrow, whose nest broke loose, put so many
-stays to the branch above that they made a little roof like a tent over
-it.
-
-Another way a bird shows reason is in seeing the advantage of a new
-place. A pair of swallows lived far out in the West, hundreds of miles
-from any house. They had no doubt always nested in a cave, or a hole in
-a tree. But one day they found a house put up. It was a mere shed, to be
-used as a blacksmith shop, by a party of men who were looking over the
-country.
-
-At once the birds saw how nice it would be to have a roof over their
-heads. And although there was a big fire, and the noise of men at work,
-they built the nest over the anvil, and reared the family in safety.
-
-Woodpeckers have shown that they can learn. Some of them have found an
-easier way to get food than to dig through the bark of trees for it.
-
-The flicker, or golden-winged woodpecker, has learned that ants and
-other insects are good to eat, and now he does not think of digging into
-bark any more.
-
-The red-headed woodpecker has learned to catch flies like a common
-flycatcher. The yellow-bellied, or sapsucker, cuts holes in the trees,
-and eats the insects that come to feed on the sweet sap that drips from
-them.
-
-[Illustration: FLICKER]
-
-Woodpeckers have also learned to cut a hole through a board and nest
-inside a building, instead of drilling a deep hole in the trunk of a
-tree for a nest.
-
-Birds show intelligence when they draw us away from their young ones, by
-acting as if they were hurt and not able to fly. I have already spoken
-about that.
-
-Sometimes when a bird is caught he will lie quiet and pretend to be
-dead. But all the time he is looking out for a chance to fly away.
-
-A man who watched birds very closely once saw an interesting instance of
-their intelligence. They were two of the birds who get their food on the
-seashore by turning over stones and eating the creatures hidden under
-them. They had found a big dead fish thrown up on the beach and half
-buried in sand. Under such a fish they were sure they should find food,
-so they went to work to turn it over. The fish was three and a half feet
-long, and the birds were about as big as our sandpipers. So it was a
-hard thing to do.
-
-First they pushed against it with their beaks and breast, but it did not
-move. Then they went around the other side and scratched away a good
-deal of sand from under the fish, and went back and tried again to turn
-it over. Still it was too heavy to stir.
-
-Again they ran around the other side, scraped away more sand, and tried
-it once more. They kept up this work for half an hour, but did not
-succeed in stirring the great fish.
-
-At this time the man, who had hidden himself to watch them, saw another
-bird coming. The two little workers greeted him with joyful cries, to
-which he replied in the same tones. Then all three set to work on the
-heavy fish. They dug more sand out from the lower side, and then pushed
-against the upper side with all their strength. They lifted it a few
-inches, but it fell back.
-
-At last, after resting a few minutes, without moving from their places,
-they worked it in this way. They rested their breasts on the sand, put
-their beaks under, and lifted. When the fish was raised several inches,
-they held it with their beaks and pushed their breasts against it, when
-over it went, down the little pitch they had made.
-
-They could not stop, and they went with it, but at once came back and
-found enough to pay them for their hard work.
-
-One who really watches birds to see what they are doing will see many
-actions that show intelligence and reason.
-
-
-
-
-HOW HE IS MADE
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-HIS BODY
-
-
-DID you ever think how well the bird is made to suit his life? Look at
-him.
-
-To fit him to move through the air in flying, his shape is the same that
-men make their boats to move through water. It is sharp in front to cut
-his way as he goes through, for even the air needs to be cut.
-
-It is narrower toward the back, and as he flies, the feet are drawn up
-or trail behind, and even the feathers lie backward. All this is so he
-can go swiftly through the air, and nothing, not even a feather, will
-hold him back.
-
-To keep his body upright, so that he will not be top-heavy and tip over
-as he flies, his weight is mostly below the wings.
-
-If we should try to go through the air as fast as a bird goes, we should
-find it very hard to breathe. But the bird is made for it. When you come
-to study his anatomy, you will see what a wonderful little creature he
-is.
-
-He can sing while he is working very hard to fly upward. If you will try
-to sing while running up a hill, you will see how hard it is to do that.
-
-A bird's head is joined to his neck at one place, something like a
-hinge. Other animals, like dogs and cats, have two hinges, or places of
-joining. That is why a bird is able to turn his head around so far that
-he can look down his own back. No other creature can do so.
-
-Because of this, he is able to dress every feather on his body, and to
-sleep with his head laid back on his shoulder.
-
-Nearly all birds have some of their bones hollow, and air-sacs, or
-pockets, under the skin. These sacs they can fill with air and make
-themselves light, so that those who live in the water cannot sink, but
-float like a cork.
-
-Men who study the way birds are made do not yet know all the uses of the
-hollow bones and air-sacs. That is one of the things left for you young
-folk to find out.
-
-Birds who get their food in marshes, or the edge of the water, have long
-legs for wading. They have also long necks, so they can pick up food
-from the ground.
-
-Birds who swim have webs between the toes, that turn their feet into
-paddles.
-
-Birds have very large gullets. In many cases the gullet leads into a
-place called the crop, where food is kept before it goes into the
-stomach. Sometimes the food is made soft in the crop, and then fed to
-the young ones, as I told you.
-
-Birds have no teeth, yet they eat hard seeds, like acorns and grains of
-corn. To break these up, and get them ready for the stomach, they have a
-gizzard, which is a sort of grinding-mill. And to help in the work of
-grinding they swallow small stones.
-
-One of the wonderful things about birds is the height at which they can
-live, and not only live, but fly. A man cannot go higher than twenty-two
-or twenty-three thousand feet, while moving about or exercising, because
-the air is so rare he cannot breathe. The highest a man was ever known
-to go and live, it is said, was less than thirty thousand feet, and that
-was in a balloon, where he did not move.
-
-But birds go a good deal higher than this, and can fly--which is violent
-exercise--at that height. It is thought by some that the thinness of the
-air may be the cause of the great speed with which birds fly in that
-region. But there is still much to be found out about this.
-
-Besides the marvels of flight, birds have other powers almost as
-strange. Many of them can fly under water with perfect ease, and, more
-than that, they can, when they wish, sink slowly till nothing is left
-above water but their beaks, to breathe. And they can stay so as long as
-they choose, keeping still in one spot, without moving.
-
-A cormorant in a zoölogical garden, who wanted to catch some of the
-swallows skimming over the pond, sank his body till only his head was
-out, and held himself there perfectly still.
-
-Birds who are hunted, as geese, have been known to save their lives in
-that way, by sinking their body under water, leaving in sight only the
-tip of the bill, which is so small it is not readily seen.
-
-To do such things, birds must be able to make their bodies heavy when
-they choose, as well as light, which we know they are able to do by
-filling their air-sacs with air.
-
-There are many things still to be found out about the powers of birds.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-HIS BEAK AND TONGUE
-
-
-HOW does a bird get along without a hand? He has to prepare food; to
-keep his feathers in order; to build the nest; to feed and take care of
-the young; and sometimes to fight other birds. How can all this be done
-without a hand?
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 1.
-
-Bill of Oriole.]
-
-The beak is the only thing most birds have in place of a hand, and it is
-wonderful to see how many things they can do with it.
-
-Orioles use it as a needle, in making the nest. With it they weave
-strips of soft bark or strings, back and forth, in and out, to make the
-firm pocket they hang on the elm-tree (see Fig. 1).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 2.
-
-Bill of Woodpecker.]
-
-A woodpecker's beak is a chisel or pick, to cut a deep hole in a tree
-trunk for a nest (Fig. 2). With a nuthatch it is a hammer, to crack the
-nut he has wedged into a crevice in the bark so tightly it cannot slip.
-
-[Illustration: WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH]
-
-Some birds use the beak to dig in the ground, as the bank swallows,
-while the barn swallows make it a trowel, to carry and plaster mud (Fig.
-3). All of them use it as a hand to feed themselves, and a brush and
-comb to dress their feathers.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 3. Bill of Swallow.]
-
-Birds need to use the beak a good deal, because in most cases it grows
-like our finger-nails. If they did not keep it worn off, it would grow
-so long as to trouble them. Sometimes when a bird lives in a cage and
-does not use his bill, it grows so long that he can hardly pick up his
-food.
-
-The woodcock's long beak is sensitive, so that he can feel the worms,
-deep in the mud where they live. Many waders and swimmers have beaks
-soft like leather.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 4. Bill of Hawk.]
-
-You can tell by the shape of the beak how a bird lives, and what he
-eats. The strong, hooked beak of a hawk shows that he catches live
-animals to eat (Fig. 4). The long, narrow, sharp bill of a heron shows
-that he spears his prey, often under water.
-
-The sharp-pointed bill of a warbler is to pick tiny insects and eggs out
-of blossoms, and from under leaves. The sharp-edged bill of a sparrow
-(Fig. 5) is to break open the hard shells of seeds.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 5. Bill of Sparrow.]
-
-The curious beak of a crossbill (Fig. 6) is to pick seeds out of pine
-cones.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 6. Bill of Crossbill.]
-
-A duck's wide beak, with a strainer at the edge, is to let water out
-while keeping food in. A spoon-shaped bill is to scoop up food, and a
-thin, flat one is to poke into narrow cracks.
-
-Both parts of the beak, which take the place of our jaws, are called
-mandibles, upper and lower. Both of them can be moved, while we can move
-only our lower jaw.
-
-Birds' tongues are as curious as their beaks. To all birds they take the
-place of a finger, as the beak takes the place of a hand, and they
-differ as much as the beaks from each other.
-
-Insect eggs are very small, and often packed snugly into cracks and
-corners, and the birds who eat them have a brush on the tip of the
-tongue, which brushes an egg out of its hiding-place very easily.
-
-The nuthatch picks his small grubs out of crevices in bark with the
-four-tined fork at the end of his tongue.
-
-A hummingbird's tongue can be used as a tube, to draw up the honey of
-flowers, or perhaps as a pair of tweezers, to pick out the tiny spiders
-that live there.
-
-A woodpecker has barbs on his tongue, to spear insects hidden under the
-bark, as shown by Mr. Lucas (Fig. 7). It is said to be sticky also, to
-hold small ones, like ants.
-
-The tongues of birds are of many shapes, but each one is fitted to its
-owner's way of getting a living.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 7. Tip of Tongue of Downy Woodpecker.]
-
-Because the tongue is often horny, and they eat strange things, it is
-sometimes thought that birds have little sense of taste. But we cannot
-be sure of this, and we know they all have notions about their food.
-
-Dr. Ward tells a story of some geese, which shows that they do not lack
-that sense. While sailing upon a river he noticed on the bank some
-geese, feeding on the rinds of watermelon, which they picked out of the
-garbage dumped there.
-
-The rind, when taken out of the mass, was none too clean, being covered
-with mud and other dirt. When a goose found a piece to suit him, he took
-it up, carried it to the edge, and dropped it into the shallow water.
-Then he stood and watched it till the running stream washed it clean,
-when he stepped into the water and quickly ate off the part he wanted.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-HIS EYES AND EARS
-
-
-BIRDS' eyes are very different from ours. To begin with, they are round.
-Then they are placed one on each side of the head, so that they can look
-two ways at once. Owls are the only birds who have eyes turned forward
-like ours.
-
-Birds' eyes also are of many colors. Besides our common black, brown,
-blue, and gray, birds have light and dark green, bright red, pale and
-deep yellow and orange, even white.
-
-They have, like us, two eyelids. But while we use the upper one to close
-our eyes, most birds use the lower one. They have also a third eyelid,
-inside the others, a thin, white sort of skin, that moves across the eye
-from side to side, and is called the "nictitating membrane."
-
-There are other ways in which birds' eyes differ from ours. The men who
-try to know exactly how birds are made have found out that birds' eyes
-make everything look much larger than it is, in other words, they are
-like magnifying glasses, or microscopes, so that a tiny insect egg, that
-we can hardly see, looks very big to a warbler.
-
-Stranger still, when a bird is far off, his eyes are like telescopes.
-That is, when a hawk is soaring about far above the earth, he can see a
-mouse on the ground as well as if he had a telescope to look through.
-And the gulls who sail about over the shore, and follow steamers on sea
-voyages, can see small fish and tiny bits of bread thrown out by the
-passengers, even when they are lost to us in the foam made by the
-vessel.
-
-Mr. Frank Bolles had a pet barred owl, and used to take him out with
-him. He says that the bird's sight was wonderful, better than his own
-aided by a strong glass. Many times the bird would see and watch a hawk
-so far off that Mr. Bolles with his glass could not see him until he
-came nearer, and then he looked no bigger than a dot against the sky.
-
-There is a story told of some small birds migrating over the island of
-Heligoland, suddenly coming down in a flock on to a man's garden, and
-beginning at once to work among the leaves as if they were feeding.
-
-The owner of the garden knew they did not eat leaves, so he shot a few
-and found them stuffed with small caterpillars. Then he looked at the
-plants and found many more caterpillars, each in the curled-up end of a
-leaf. The insects could not be seen, yet the birds, while flying over,
-no doubt saw the curled leaves and knew they were there.
-
-Such eyes must be of great use in helping birds to find their food, and
-to avoid their enemies. But think what giants we must look to them! It
-is no wonder they are afraid of us.
-
-Perhaps even more useful to a bird than his eyes are his ears, though
-they are so nicely covered up by the feathers that we cannot see them.
-The tufts of feathers that stand up on some owls' heads, and are called
-ears, are not ears at all, but merely decorations, like the crests of
-some birds and the long tail feathers of others.
-
-But because they cannot be seen, we must not think birds have no ears;
-they have very good ones indeed. They can hear much better than we can.
-
-Every one has seen a robin run over the grass and turn his head one side
-to listen. It is supposed that he hears the earthworm move under the
-sod, and if he is watched, he will often be seen to pull the worm from
-that very spot.
-
-When a woodpecker taps on a tree trunk and turns his head to listen, it
-is thought that he hears the grub stir under the bark, for when he
-begins to cut the bark away, he is pretty sure to find and draw it out.
-
-Birds that are much hunted by men, like ducks and geese, get to be very
-knowing, and show how wonderful is their hearing. They can tell the
-difference between a noise made by an animal and that made by a man. A
-deer or any animal may crash through the bushes, and they pay no
-attention to it, but if a man makes the least sound they are off in an
-instant.
-
-A bird's ears are behind the eyes, and a little below them. They are
-covered by delicate feathers that hide them from sight. When the bird
-raises these feathers--perhaps to hear better--they look like tiny ear
-muffs.
-
-Owls have little flaps of skin with which they can shut up their ears
-when they wish to be quiet. This must be very useful to birds who prefer
-to sleep during the day, when nearly everybody else is awake and making
-a noise. Many of us who live in cities would like to be able to close
-our ears sometimes.
-
-Mr. Bolles tells a story about the sharp hearing of a heron. The bird
-was on a tree dressing his plumage, and he was hidden in some bushes and
-could not be seen.
-
-Mr. Bolles made all sorts of noises to start up the heron and make him
-fly. First he imitated animal sounds. He quacked, and barked, and mewed,
-and brayed, and the bird looked interested, but not at all alarmed. Then
-he whistled and sang, and at last talked plainly, but the bird only
-looked over his way, as if to see what new sort of beast was hidden
-there.
-
-No noise that he could make startled the heron in the least, until a
-twig snapped under his foot, when the bird was off like a shot. That
-sound he well knew was made by his most feared enemy, man.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-HIS FEET AND LEGS
-
-
-A BIRD always stands on his toes, not on his whole foot, as we do. The
-long slim part that we call the leg is really the foot, and the joint we
-see nearly up to the bird's body is the bird's heel. But in this book we
-will speak of it in the common way, calling the toes the foot, and the
-part up to the joint the leg.
-
-People all over the world have the same kind of feet and the same number
-of toes; but with birds it is not so. Most of them have four toes (Fig.
-8), but some have only three, and a few have no more than two.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 8.
-
-Foot of Blackbird.]
-
-In the use of the feet there is still more variety. There are, as Dr.
-Coues divides them, three kinds of feet among birds:--
-
-[Illustration: LESSER YELLOWLEGS]
-
-First, a foot that can be used like a hand to clasp a perch, a "perching
-foot."
-
-Second, one that is good to use as a foot, but not at all like a hand,
-called a "scratching foot."
-
-Third, one that is like neither hand nor foot, but a paddle, called a
-"swimming foot."
-
-The birds who have the first kind, the "perching foot," have usually
-three toes turned forward and one turned back. They can grasp a branch
-or a twig as tightly as if with a hand, as all our common little birds
-do. And the large birds of prey, such as hawks and owls (Fig. 9), hold
-in them live mice and squirrels and the other little animals they eat.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 9. Foot of Hawk.]
-
-Some birds with perching feet have the toes placed another way.
-Woodpeckers have two turned forward and two turned back, so that they
-can hold better to a tree trunk (Fig. 10).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 10. Foot of Woodpecker.]
-
-A strange thing about the perching toes is the way they are made to hold
-on, so that the birds can sleep on a perch, and not fall. Inside the
-toes are tendons, something like cords, which act like elastic
-rubber. When a bird bends his leg, the toes are drawn up and held so.
-When he is sitting on a perch, he could not fall off if he wanted to.
-
-Birds who have the "scratching foot," the second kind, mostly go about
-on the ground, or wade in the water. They do not usually sleep on
-perches, but sleep standing, or crouch on the ground. In the arctic
-regions, where there is a great deal of snow, some birds with scratching
-feet, who have to go about in it, have in winter what has been called
-"snowshoes," because it enables them to walk on the snow with ease. It
-is a web-like growth on the side of each toe, which serves the same
-purpose with birds that snowshoes do with men, keeps them from sinking
-into the snow.
-
-Birds who have the "swimming foot," the third kind, have the toes made
-into a paddle by webs stretched between them. They are the water
-birds,--ducks, geese, gulls, and others.
-
-The toes of all birds have long, sharp claws, not at all like our
-toe-nails. In the whip-poor-will and the nighthawk, one edge of the
-middle claw has teeth like a comb.
-
-The long slim part above the toes, what we call the leg, is named in the
-books the "tarsus." The tarsus is generally bare, with a leathery skin;
-but in some hawks and owls it is covered with feathers. Birds who live
-away up in the cold have feathers down on to the toes.
-
-On looking carefully at one of these bare legs, it will be seen that it
-is not smooth like a lead pencil. It is marked in a sort of pattern.
-Different species of birds show different patterns. Some look like the
-shingles on a roof; others like little squares or plates; and some are
-finer, like scales on a tiny fish.
-
-These marks help in arranging birds in the books. That is, all who have
-the same pattern are said to be related.
-
-The legs of birds are not all of the same length for their size. Some
-who never go about on the ground, like hummingbirds, swallows, and
-swifts, have very short legs. Birds who walk and hop on the ground have
-them longer, and birds who wade in the water have the longest of all.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-HIS WINGS AND TAIL
-
-
-A BIRD'S wing does not look much like our arm and hand, yet the bones
-show that they are the same. The bird has a shoulder, elbow, and wrist,
-as we have. He even has fingers, though they are so covered up by
-feathers that one would never know it. He has not so many fingers as we
-have, and they are not movable like ours.
-
-A bird's wing is a wonderful flying-machine, which men have been trying
-to imitate these many years. It is made of long stiff feathers, which
-fold down smoothly over one another at his side when he is resting, but
-can spread in an instant into a broad fan, to beat the air and carry him
-away.
-
-One would not think that feathers could have so much power; but when the
-wing is spread, the barbs of the feathers hook together with tiny hooks,
-so small a microscope is needed to see them; and that, together with the
-edges lapping over each other, makes them almost like one solid
-surface.
-
-Wings are not alike in shape. The wing of a swallow is long and narrow,
-while that of a hen or grouse is short and round. We can tell by the
-shape of a wing how a bird flies.
-
-A long, narrow, pointed wing shows that the bird has an easy, skimming
-flight,--either he flies great distances, or spends hours at a time on
-wing (Fig. 11).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 11.
-
-Wing of Swift.]
-
-The short round wing (Fig. 12) shows that a bird has a strong flight for
-short distances. These wings are found mostly on rather heavy birds,
-like grouse.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 12.
-
-Wing of Sparrow.]
-
-The longest wings are seen on water birds, such as the petrel and the
-frigate-bird. The shortest, also, are found among water birds, those who
-swim more than they fly, as the auks.
-
-All the feathers of the wing are named, and it will be well to remember
-that the long stiff quills are called _remiges_ or "rowers." These are
-firmly rooted in the flesh, and are the hardest to pull out. They are
-the most important to the safety of the bird.
-
-Birds have also another use for their wings. They are a strong weapon to
-defend themselves, or to fight others. A large bird can give a severe
-blow with his wing, and when pigeons fight, it is said they hold up one
-wing to protect themselves while they strike at the enemy with the
-other.
-
-Sometimes wings serve as musical instruments. Woodcocks make whistling
-sounds with their wings as they fly, and mourning doves softly murmuring
-ones. Ruffed grouse produce with theirs a rolling drum-like effect, and
-others rattle theirs like castanets.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 13.
-
-Tail of Ruffed Grouse.]
-
-If wings are not used, they slowly get to be smaller and weaker, each
-generation having them more and more useless, till after a while they
-are of no use whatever, and the birds cannot fly at all. This has
-happened, it is supposed, to the ostrich family and to some birds living
-in the sea.
-
-[Illustration: BROWN THRASHER]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 14.
-
-Tail of Vireo.]
-
-The tail of a bird is formed of an equal number of feathers in pairs,
-most often twelve. When spread they are the shape of a fan (Fig. 13),
-and when closed they lie over each other with the middle pair on top.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 15.
-
-Tail of Swallow-tailed Kite.]
-
-The tail feathers are not always of the same length, and that makes a
-difference in the shape of the end. Sometimes they are even (like Fig.
-14), when the tail is said to be "square." Sometimes the middle feathers
-are a little longer than the outside ones, and then it is "rounded"
-or "pointed." If the outside feathers are longest, the tail is "forked"
-(Fig. 15).
-
-The feathers of the tail are called _rectrices_, or "rudders," because
-they are supposed to be used to steer, or direct the bird's course in
-flying. But the tail is used also as a brake to check the speed in
-alighting.
-
-The tail is used more than any other organ to express the emotions. Some
-birds, like the catbird and thrasher, keep it moving nearly all the
-time, jerking it this way and that, and tossing it upward.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 16.
-
-Tail of Sapsucker.]
-
-In woodpeckers and swifts the tail feathers are not soft at the end like
-others, but the stems or shafts project beyond the feathery part, and
-are stiff like the tail of a sapsucker (Fig. 16) or sharp like this of
-the chimney swift (Fig. 17). These birds use the tail as a prop to hold
-them against the tree trunk or chimney wall, and to help them in
-climbing.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 17.
-
-Swift Tail.]
-
-Tail feathers are not so strongly rooted as wing feathers, and are
-easily pulled out. Sometimes, when a man or boy tries to catch a bird by
-the tail, the bird will escape, leaving the tail in his hand.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-HIS DRESS
-
-
-A BIRD'S whole dress is made of feathers, but the feathers are not all
-alike. There are, indeed, several kinds of feathers, and four of them
-are found on every bird. There are flight feathers, clothing feathers,
-downy feathers, thread feathers, and powder-down feathers.
-
-Feathers of all kinds are made in the same way. All have, first, a
-quill, the horny part next to the body; second, a shaft, the white part
-on which the barbs grow; third, the barbs, which grow out on each side
-of the shaft, and together are called the vane; fourth, the barbules, or
-little barbs, growing out of the barbs; and last, the barbicels, which
-grow on the barbules, and on the wings have the tiny hooks which hold
-them together.
-
-But though feathers are made on the same pattern, they look very
-different. The wing and tail feathers are stiff and strong, and are
-called flight feathers, but those on the breast and body are called
-soft, and cling closely to keep the bird warm and dry. These are called
-the clothing feathers, because they clothe the bird.
-
-Down feathers, which are almost always hidden under the clothing
-feathers, are, like their name, downy, and answer to our under-clothes.
-
-Thread feathers grow among the clothing feathers, and are almost like
-hairs. It is these that the cook singes off the fowls.
-
-Kingfishers who dive, and ducks who spend much time on the water, have
-very thick down under the feathers--like suits of very warm
-under-clothes--which keeps the water away from their bodies. Thus they
-can dive, or sit on the water hours at a time, and not feel wet at all.
-
-Powder-down feathers grow on some herons and cockatoos. They are called
-by that name because the tip ends are continually breaking off like
-white dust. Nobody knows their use.
-
-Different from all these are the feathers called plumes, like the long,
-soft ostrich plumes we all know; the dainty little ones that stand
-straight up, and look as if the wind would blow them away; the long,
-showy feathers that the peacock spreads with so much pride, or even the
-pretty, drooping ones in the cock's tail.
-
-These feathers are of no use for flight or for warmth, they rather
-hinder than help. They are for ornament, and there are many kinds among
-birds, all exquisitely beautiful. Nature has given to birds a more
-wonderful dress than to any other living creature.
-
-It is with his feathers that a bird expresses his feelings. In anger he
-fluffs them out till he looks twice as big as usual; we have all seen a
-hen bristle up when a dog comes near her brood.
-
-Nervousness or excitement is shown by jerking the wings and tail, and if
-a bird wishes to escape notice, he can make his plumage a perfect
-disguise. Mr. Bolles's pet owl would stretch himself up long and slim,
-with feathers hugging his body, when he looked so much like a broken
-branch of a tree that Mr. Bolles could hardly see him. And another owl
-that I heard of, when he was on the ground, would flatten himself and
-spread his plumage around, so that the eye could scarcely separate him
-from the dead leaves about him.
-
-No one takes better care of his dress than a bird, and that is why it
-looks well for a year. Every day, with most birds, it is washed and
-carefully dried, each feather being passed through the bill, and the
-whole thoroughly shaken out. At night one may often see robins and
-catbirds before going to bed, dressing their plumage and shaking off the
-day's dust.
-
-Besides washing and drying the feathers, birds need oil to keep them in
-best condition. For this purpose they have a little "oil jug," a small
-gland over the tail, out of which, with the bill, they can squeeze a
-drop of oil. We often see ducks and geese oiling their feathers before a
-rain.
-
-Water birds, who need a great deal of oil to keep out the wet, have the
-oil jug very large.
-
-Birds seem to know perfectly well the beauty of their plumage. Not only
-do they try to show it off, as the peacock when he spreads his tail, but
-they seem to feel shame when their feathers are injured or soiled. One
-white feather coming in where it does not belong will make a bird very
-unhappy. He will work and tug at it to pull it out, and often make
-himself actually ill over the trouble. I had a captive bird who died, I
-think, from worry and work over a wing feather which persisted in coming
-in white, and which he insisted on pulling out every time.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-DIFFERENT COLORED SUITS
-
-
-A BIRD does not always wear the same colored dress, as I said in the
-chapter on moulting. A goldfinch, who through the summer wears a gay
-yellow coat, comes out in the fall in plain olive and black; and the
-scarlet tanager, who flourishes in the most brilliant red, changes to a
-quiet green in winter. Besides these, some birds wear at one season a
-spotted coat, and come out afterwards in one of plain colors.
-
-Most of them change by moulting, as I explained, the old feathers
-dropping out and new ones of another color coming in; or, to speak
-exactly, the new ones growing out and pushing the old ones off on their
-tips. But some change color without moulting. All birds moult completely
-in the autumn, many moult partially in the spring, and some, as I said,
-change without moulting.
-
-This last change of color is made partly by fading, and partly by
-breaking off the tips of the feathers, or what is called "abrasion."
-This is a curious process. I told you something about it in chapter vii.
-Certain feathers have edges different in color from the rest; as, for
-example, a black feather with tips of yellow. While the feathers are new
-and perfect, as they lie over each other like shingles on a roof, only
-the edges show, and these being yellow, the bird appears to be dressed
-in yellow. But the yellow tips are not so strong as the rest, and they
-break or wear off, or are pulled off in the spring. What is strange,
-they break exactly where the black begins. So as soon as the yellow is
-off, the black shows, and behold, the yellow bird suddenly becomes a
-black bird.
-
-That is the way some birds manage to put on their spring dress in the
-fall. The solid color is the color of the spring, but it is hidden or
-veiled by tips of another color for winter.
-
-The meadowlark changes in this way. In the winter his coat is brownish,
-or buff. In the spring these tips are worn or broken off, and he comes
-out in yellow and black.
-
-Another change, even more curious, is made by some birds, who all winter
-wear white spots, or light scolloped edges to their feathers, and in
-spring the spots are gone.
-
-In these, the white or light parts only break off, as sharply as if cut
-with scissors. They leave the edges of the feathers notched in queer
-ways, but as they lie over each other that does not show.
-
-[Illustration: BLACK AND WHITE WARBLERS (MALE AND FEMALE)]
-
-Birds in this way can change color without changing their feathers.
-While moulting but once a year, they can show two suits, and by
-partially moulting twice, can show three suits.
-
-Another thing about the color of feathers is interesting. Some colors,
-such as black, and red, and brown, are caused by coloring matter in the
-feather. But other colors are only an effect of the way the feather is
-made, whether it has ridges on it, or certain minute specks under the
-surface, which seem to act as prisms (says Dr. Newton), and reflect the
-light in different colors.
-
-For instance, green is always due to some shade of yellow coloring
-matter under a surface full of lengthwise ridges, and other colors are
-made in similar ways.
-
-These curious facts have been found out by that tell-tale little
-instrument the microscope, and no doubt it will reveal many more secrets
-in time.
-
-Color is useful to birds, as well as beautiful. Its great use is to
-conceal them from their enemies, and they show that they know this by
-their conduct.
-
-When a bird is of the color of dead leaves, or the sand, he has only
-to flatten himself and keep still, and he is hidden. Such a bird on the
-nest will often let one come close, and even stroke her, while relying
-on her color to be unseen. A sitting ruffed grouse will do so. But if
-snow falls, the same bird is very wild, for she knows she can be seen in
-the snow.
-
-I have seen a striped bird,--black and white warbler,--when frightened,
-flatten himself on a branch, where he looked so much like the bark that
-he could not be seen.
-
-Ground birds are mostly in mottled colors of the ground. The
-whip-poor-will, whose habit it is to rest on a log all day, wears colors
-that hide him as well as if he were under the log.
-
-The striking colors on a bird are often bidden when he is at rest, but
-show plainly when he flies. When a flicker stands quietly on a fence he
-is all in rather dull colors, but when he flies he shows a large
-snow-white spot on his back, so that as far as one can see him he may be
-known.
-
-A meadowlark on the ground looks not unlike a flicker, but when he flies
-he shows that the outside feathers of his tail are white. This is as
-striking a mark as the white spot on the flicker.
-
-Many birds have such markings, and it is thought by men who study birds
-and look for a use in everything, that such marks serve the purpose of
-"danger signals" or "recognition marks." That by these birds can know
-each other in the dusk, or that the flash of color will catch the eye,
-when the bird does not wish to give a call, but to slip away quietly to
-avoid danger, and at the same time to give notice to other birds to do
-the same.
-
-
-
-
-HIS RELATIONS WITH US
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-HOW HE WORKS FOR US
-
-
-MANY times in this book I have spoken of the great value of the services
-of birds, in helping us destroy insects and weeds that injure our crops.
-But there is more to be said about it.
-
-From morning till night, almost the whole of his life, nearly every bird
-is working for us. He does not know he is working for us, of course. He
-is simply hunting for the food he likes, and what is good for young
-birds to eat.
-
-But what he chooses to eat himself, and to feed the young, consists
-mostly of creatures that destroy our fruit and vegetables, caterpillars
-that eat the leaves off our trees, worms that get into our apples and
-berries, beetles that spoil our roses and our potatoes, mice that eat
-our crops, and all the worms and grubs that gardeners and farmers are
-all the time fighting.
-
-As I have already said, some of the birds like cherries and green peas,
-and other things we prefer to keep for ourselves. But we should never
-forget that they have earned, by their work among the worms, all they
-can take.
-
-[Illustration: CEDAR-BIRD]
-
-I say this, not merely because I love the birds, and want to have them
-live and be happy, but because it is true. It has been proved true by
-scientific men in the service of the United States government.
-
-These men have had thousands of birds killed to see what they were
-eating, and have found out that nearly all the birds they have
-examined--blackbirds, cedar-birds, blue jays, hawks, owls, even
-crows--do us more good by the injurious creatures they destroy, than
-harm by the fruits and vegetables they eat. To this there is, among the
-small birds, but one exception, the English sparrow, and, of the large
-ones, only the two hawks and one owl, mentioned on page 53.
-
-Chickadees like to eat the eggs of cankerworms; and for a single meal,
-one of these tiny birds will eat two hundred and fifty eggs, and he will
-take several meals a day. Now cankerworms destroy our apples. When they
-get into an orchard in force, it looks, as Miss Merriam says, as if it
-had been burned over.
-
-Robins, catbirds, and shrikes, and several others, like to eat cutworms,
-which destroy grass and other plants. As many as three hundred of them
-have been found in the stomach of one robin, of course for one meal.
-Ants are very troublesome in many ways, and three thousand of them have
-been taken from the stomach of one flicker.
-
-Rats and mice, ground squirrels and gophers, make great havoc in our
-crops, and farmers spend much time and labor trying to get rid of them;
-but these creatures are the favorite food of most hawks and owls.
-
-If the farmer would stop shooting the birds, and protect them instead,
-they would do this work for him, and much better than he can. But
-because (as I said in a former chapter) one or two hawks and owls have a
-taste for chickens, he generally kills every hawk and owl he sees, and
-for this folly has to spend half his time trying to kill the little
-animals they would gladly have eaten.
-
-A great deal of refuse, dead sea creatures, and other matter, is thrown
-up on the seashore, or floats on the water. On this feed the water
-birds,--herons, gulls, terns, and others. If this were not disposed of,
-it would make us sick. Indeed, on the shores where so many herons have
-been killed, to get their plumes for ladies' hats, the result has been
-sickness and death among the people, as Dr. Gaumer, of Yucatan, told Mr.
-Chapman.
-
-Besides the work they do for us in destroying animal life, their
-seed-eating is almost as useful. As I said, they eat the seeds of weeds
-that farmers and gardeners are all the time laboring to keep down, so
-that useful plants may have a chance to grow.
-
-The whole family of finches, sparrows, buntings, grosbeaks, and all
-birds with the high, thick bill, though they eat largely of insects
-through the summer, and feed their nestlings on them, when insects get
-scarce and weed seeds are ripe, turn to the latter for food. They eat
-the seeds of all kinds of troublesome weeds; and as each single seed
-might produce a plant, we cannot guess how much they destroy.
-
-Professor Beal, who is at the head of this government inquiry into the
-food of birds, and who knows what he is talking about, says that one
-species of little bird--the tree sparrow--destroys every year in one of
-the Western States, many tons of the seeds of weeds.
-
-There is a curious and interesting fact about this seed-eating. The
-regular seed-eaters, the finches, prefer the seeds of certain weeds,
-most of them harmful; these they break up, taking off the shells, and of
-course destroying the germ, making it impossible for them to grow.
-
-But there are many birds who eat berries having in them seeds, such as
-raspberries, blackberries, and all kinds of wild fruit. These birds do
-not crack the seeds; and, as they are hard, they do not digest in the
-stomach, but are dropped whole, and are ready to grow wherever they
-fall.
-
-Thus, while seed-eating birds destroy the weeds which are hurtful, the
-fruit-eaters plant the seeds of berries and fruit which we like. That is
-why we find wild berry bushes all over the country. We have to thank the
-birds for it.
-
-A great deal more could be said about the birds' work for us, not only
-of the robins and those I have spoken of, but cedar-birds, who are shot
-because they take part of our cherries, blackbirds, because they eat
-some grain, orioles, because they occasionally take green peas, and
-kingbirds, because they have the name of eating bees, though it has been
-proved that they eat only drones, which have no sting and make no honey.
-
-Let me impress upon you two facts. First, the stories of the harm done
-by birds are often mere guesswork, from careless observation. For
-instance, a man seeing a bird going over his blossoming fruit-trees, at
-once concludes he is destroying the fruit, probably shoots him, and then
-writes to his favorite paper that a certain bird eats fruit buds. Other
-papers copy it, and a war against that bird begins in every orchard.
-
-Whereas, the truth is, the bird was preserving the fruit by picking out
-the insects that would have spoiled it. This is no fancy picture; this
-very thing has happened more than once.
-
-And again, whatever is said about the harm this or that bird does, never
-forget this second fact, which I repeat, and which may be relied upon as
-perfectly trustworthy. The officers of the government of the United
-States, who have carefully studied the matter and found out positively,
-without guesswork, what birds eat, have declared emphatically that every
-bird they have examined does more good by destroying pests, than harm to
-our crops, excepting only the bird we have imported,--the English or
-house sparrow.
-
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-HOW TO ATTRACT HIM ABOUT OUR HOMES
-
-
-BECAUSE birds are so useful to us, as well as because they are so
-interesting and so beautiful, it is delightful to have them come about
-our homes. And it is not at all difficult, for they are easily taught to
-like us.
-
-In countries where people are gentle, and try to make birds happy,
-instead of shooting them or throwing stones at them, they become very
-tame. Mr. Hearn, who has written about Japan, says that the fearlessness
-of wild creatures is one of the most charming things about the remote
-parts of Japan, "where tourists with shotguns have not yet come."
-
-Travelers who visit Norway tell us that birds are never disturbed there,
-and they come freely about the houses. When it is very cold they even
-come into the houses for food and warmth, and no one thinks of
-frightening them or trying to catch them.
-
-Even in our own country, Dr. Ridgway told me of a bird-lover in Florida
-who would not let birds be annoyed on his place. As a result he had a
-great many there, and they became very tame. Cardinal grosbeaks, who are
-rather shy, were so tame they would take food from his hand.
-
-A person living in the country, wishing to draw the birds about his
-place, should begin by protecting it. Cats should not be allowed to come
-near, English sparrows should be kept down, and boys who shoot or throw
-stones should be banished from the vicinity.
-
-Next, trees and shrubs that birds like, for nesting and for food, should
-be set out. For nesting, a very attractive place for the smaller species
-is a thick hedge of bushes, the thicker and closer the better.
-
-Nesting-boxes nailed up in trees please many, and evergreen trees will
-draw some that would not come otherwise. For food, various berry-bearing
-shrubs and trees should be provided, such as chokecherry, shadberry,
-mulberry, and others.
-
-In a town or city, besides shrubs that birds like, a high fence, with a
-top that cats cannot walk on, is desirable, and a readiness to go to
-their assistance is soon appreciated.
-
-A friend told me a few days ago of a family of wood thrushes who nested
-last summer in the yard of her house in the city of Orange, N. J. The
-birds soon found out that some of the family would come to drive away
-strange cats which came in. After they learned that, when a cat appeared
-they would give a peculiar cry, unlike any other heard from them. On
-hearing this, one of the family always hurried out and drove the enemy
-away.
-
-If the birds could not get any response from a call at the kitchen door,
-they would fly to the front of the house, perch on the piazza rail, and
-call till some one came out. All through nesting-time they thus called
-on their friends for protection, and the delight the family had over the
-nest and the friendly birds amply repaid them for their trouble.
-
-The one great necessity, in both city and country, is water for drinking
-and bathing. It should be in a shallow dish. The rough saucer of a
-flower-pot is best, because the bird's feet do not slip on it, and the
-edge is broad and round and easy to perch on.
-
-Next best is an earthen dish, with clean pebbles in the bottom, to
-prevent slipping, which frightens them. Water should never be more than
-two inches deep, but should always be clean, and fresh two or three
-times a day.
-
-No food should be offered in summer, because we want them to get their
-natural food of worms and seeds.
-
-In the winter it is different. They should have food regularly. But once
-used to having their wants supplied, they will depend upon it, and
-suffer and probably starve, if they are neglected or forgotten. So one
-should be very sure he will not get tired of it, before he teaches them
-to expect food.
-
-To feed them safely, a shelf must be placed out of the reach of cats and
-bad boys. On the sill of a window is a good place, or the roof of a
-piazza, or a little balcony. Breakfast should be served to them at the
-same hour every day, and they will soon know when to come for it.
-
-For food, they will eat any table scraps of meat, and vegetables, and
-bread, chopped fine, and most kinds of grain, broken up, or crushed, for
-the smaller birds.
-
-But the thing they all like best of everything is raw suet, as it comes
-from the butcher. A large piece may be wired or nailed in place, so that
-it may be picked at and not displaced, or it may be chopped fine and
-scattered on the shelf, like other food. All birds are fond of this.
-
-In winter they need water, and it should then, also, be fresh.
-
-A lady living in southern Ohio, who has for several years given a
-breakfast to the birds every day in winter, told me that her daily
-guests last season were hairy and downy woodpeckers, nuthatches, white
-and red-breasted, one young kinglet, a pair of chickadees, tufted
-titmice, blue jays, juncos, cardinal grosbeaks, Carolina wrens, and
-sparrows.
-
-This delightful company came regularly for breakfast, and to pay her,
-sang nearly through the season.
-
-In the latitude of New York there are about forty birds who spend the
-winter, and of course there are more as one goes south. In the Southern
-States, many of our northern birds may be studied in the winter.
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-HOW TO STUDY HIM
-
-
-AN attractive thing about bird study is the fact that there is still so
-much to be found out.
-
-Men have been studying the dead bird for many years. All about the body
-is well known. The way he is made, the arrangement of his bones and his
-organs, are plainly set forth in the books, in words and pictures.
-
-The shape and colors of his plumage, how many feathers belong to his
-wing and tail, his length, his extent, the shape of his beak and his
-foot,--all these facts are to be found in every Ornithology.
-
-Some of his most easily noted habits, too, are familiar; where and when
-he nests, where he spends his time, and where he goes in the winter,
-what he eats, and when he changes his dress.
-
-But really to know the living bird, to make acquaintance with the
-individual, to see his family life, his manners, his intelligence, his
-powers,--this kind of study has hardly begun.
-
-This almost new and most attractive field is open to us to-day. It
-offers a charming study, with the added interest of discoveries to be
-made. Nor is it so hard as most persons think.
-
-In the beginning there are two things to learn: first, how to study from
-life; and second, how to identify without killing. To study is simply to
-observe closely and carefully, and to report accurately.
-
-Take a little lesson in observing: When you see a bird do not merely
-gaze idly at him, but take note of everything about him. What he is
-doing, how he is doing it, and all his points, his size and shape, his
-colors and markings.
-
-If he is getting food, as he most often is, see whether he picks it from
-the tree trunk or gathers it from grass tops; whether he hunts it among
-leaves, bores the bark, drops to the ground, or sails out into the air
-for it.
-
-Then try to discover what it is--insect or seed, beetle, grub, or
-worm--and what he does with it,--swallow it at once, beat it to death,
-or hold it in his mouth uneaten.
-
-Then notice his manners,--if he stands still, or jerks his tail or body;
-if he flits about the branches, hovers before a flower, or hammers at
-the door of an unlucky grub behind the bark. Next, does he walk or hop?
-does he chatter or keep silent? fly straight, or go bounding in great
-waves through the air? All these things you must learn to see, and to
-note down the moment you do so, so that you will not be uncertain or
-confused when you take your books to see who he is.
-
-Then you must take note of his size, and to do this--as it is hard to
-judge of inches--it is well to have in mind a sort of index of size to
-which you can compare him. Take the most common and best-known birds for
-standards, the robin, the English sparrow, and one smaller,--the wren,
-or the "chebec" (least flycatcher). When you see a bird, if he is as big
-as a robin, enter in your note: "Size, robin." Should he be a little
-smaller, yet still larger than your measure,--the English sparrow,--you
-can note it, "Size, robin -," the minus sign meaning that it is less. If
-he were larger, you would put the plus sign: "Size, robin +."
-
-Observe the shape, whether it is slim like an oriole, or chunky like a
-chickadee; also any peculiarity of plumage, as a crest, specially long
-or strangely formed tail feathers; the end of the tail, whether square,
-rounded, pointed, or notched.
-
-Then notice the beak; its length compared to the head, its shape and
-color. If it is high and thick, like a canary's or sparrow's, the bird
-is a seed-eater; if long and straight, like a robin's, he is an
-insect-eater; if sharp and flat, opening very wide like a swallow's, he
-is a flycatcher.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 18.
-
-Canadian Warbler.]
-
-Lastly, note the plumage, the general color, then special markings, such
-as bars on wings or tail, a ring around the eye (Fig. 18), or a line
-over or through the eye (Fig. 19), white or black throat (Fig. 20 or
-19), speckled or striped breast (Fig. 18), or any conspicuous blotch.
-Every point must be set down the moment you notice it. You cannot trust
-your memory.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 19.
-
-Black-throated Green Warbler.]
-
-With these full notes, return to your study and take your manual to find
-out his name, or to identify.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 20.
-
-White-throated Sparrow.]
-
-Many persons think that in order to know a bird, and especially to find
-out his name, one must have him in the hand, count his wing and tail
-feathers, and measure his length. Excepting for exact scientific
-purposes, this is not at all necessary. Almost any bird in America may
-be perfectly identified without touching him, indeed, while he is in the
-enjoyment of his liberty in a tree. For birds have marked external
-differences, which are carefully set down in the books.
-
-The modern manuals, too, are usually furnished with a color key, the use
-of which is fully explained in them. With the help of this you will have
-little trouble in naming your bird.
-
-Above all, be exact in your knowledge and do not jump at conclusions. If
-you see a bird on a fruit-tree picking about the blossoms, do not decide
-offhand that he is spoiling the fruit; look closely to see if he is not,
-instead, clearing it of worms that would destroy it all. When you notice
-a bird in a strawberry bed, do not instantly conclude that he is after
-strawberries; he doesn't care half so much for berries as he does for
-insects, and very often he is engaged in ridding the plants of pests, at
-the moment that he is scared off or shot by a careless person, who does
-not wait to see whether he is friend or foe.
-
-Although patience and clear eyes alone will open many delightful secrets
-of bird life, a good opera glass will do still more. It will bring you
-nearer to the bird without frightening him. You can see thus much
-better, not only his markings, but what he is doing. In a word, you can
-be more sure of your facts.
-
-In deciding upon the actions of a bird, never _guess_ at anything. If
-you see a pair very busy about a shrub, you may be sure they have a nest
-there, but do not so record it till you have actually seen the nest.
-Even then you should not conclude at once that it belongs to them; I
-have seen birds sit a few moments in nests which did not belong to
-them--as if to try them. You may feel very sure what a bird means by an
-action, but you should set down only what he _does_. Without this care,
-your records will be worthless.
-
-Do not discourage yourself by trying to find the name of every tiny atom
-in feathers that you see; indeed, little birds flitting about the
-tree-tops--mostly warblers--will be hard for you to identify, and almost
-impossible to watch. I advise you to confine your study at first to the
-larger and less lively birds,--kingbirds, robins, thrushes, phoebes,
-bluebirds, orioles, goldfinches, and others, all of which you will find
-near to houses and easy to study. Do not expect too much at once, nor
-give up in despair if you cannot identify the first bird you see.
-
-[Illustration: SCARLET TANAGER]
-
-You may be sure that every hour you honestly give to the study will make
-it more interesting; every bird you learn to know will be like a new and
-delightful companion.
-
-You will lose your desire to take life or even to steal eggs from them;
-the country will have new charms for you; in fact, a person blessed with
-a love of the study of birds or beasts or insects possesses a lifelong
-and inexhaustible source of interest and happiness.
-
-In regard to a manual, there are now so many to be had, one hardly knows
-how to select. I will mention only two or three, which have particular
-points of value.
-
-A good book to begin with, for residents of New England, New York, and
-the Eastern Middle States, is Professor Willcox's "Land Birds of New
-England" (Lothrop Lee & Shepard, Boston. Price 60 cts., by mail).
-
-Although this little book treats of only ninety birds, they are the most
-common, and its value is its simplicity, and the ease with which its
-color key enables one to identify the birds it treats. It introduces a
-beginner to the larger works in a most pleasing way.
-
-A good general work for Eastern North America, thoroughly trustworthy
-and not too technical in its use of terms, treating all the birds of
-the locality, is Chapman's "Handbook of the Birds of Eastern North
-America" (Appleton, New York. Price $3.00). It has a color key and a
-color chart, by which one may see what is meant by colors named.
-
-Especially attractive to ladies and amateurs, for its charming accounts
-of bird life, is Mrs. Wright's "Birdcraft" (Macmillan, New York. Price,
-$2.00). It treats but two hundred species, but that includes the birds
-usually seen in the New England and Northern Middle States. It has a
-color key.
-
-The whole United States is covered by Dr. Coues's "Key to North American
-Birds," 2 volumes (The Page Company, Boston. Price $12.50). It is not
-quite so easy for the beginner, but it is untechnical in style, and
-fully illustrated.
-
-One book deserving mention because of its value as an aid to teachers is
-Miss Merriam's "Birds of Village and Field" (Houghton Mifflin Co.,
-Boston. Price $2.00). It is exceptionally rich in facts and statistics
-relating to the economic value of birds. It treats nearly two hundred of
-the most common birds.
-
-A book intended for identification only is Professor Apgar's "Birds of
-the United States" (American Book Company, New York. Price $2.00). It is
-the result of his experience as teacher, and has several new features
-very helpful to beginners, such as small cuts at the bottom of pages to
-explain terms, thus showing exactly what is meant, for example, by "wing
-bars" or "rounded tail." It also gives hints about the usual locality of
-a bird, whether creeping over a tree trunk, on the wing, or elsewhere.
-It takes particular note of size, having one section for birds about the
-size of an English sparrow, and so on. The pronunciation of the Latin
-names is carefully indicated. There are several chapters giving
-descriptions of the external parts of a bird, and there is a glossary of
-scientific terms.
-
-The following list of points to observe in watching birds has been used
-to advantage by classes in bird study. A little familiarity with this
-will help one to remember what to look for.
-
-A similar, but fuller and more elaborate, list has been prepared, and
-bound up in tablets, to use in the field. It is for sale by Miss J. A.
-Clark, 1322 Twelfth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
-
-
-
-
-POINTS TO OBSERVE
-
- 1. Locality--tree: bush: ground.
- 2. Size--compared to robin: English sparrow.
- 3. Form--long: short: slender: plump.
- 4. Beak--high: stout: wide: hooked: long: lobes: drawn down.
- 5. Tail--length: shape at end.
- 6. Legs--long: short: scales.
- 7. Toes--webbed: how turned: hind claw long.
- 8. Color--bright: striking: dull: plain.
- 9. Markings--on head: breast: wing: tail: back.
- 10. Manners--walk: hop: quiet: active: noisy: silent.
- 11. Habits--eating seeds: berries: insects: from ground: tree
- trunk: leaves.
- 12. Song--long: short: continuous: broken.
- 13. Flight--direct: undulating: fluttering: labored.
- 14. Nest--where placed: shape: materials: eggs.
- 15. Young--plumage: behavior.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
-
-
-
-THE SECOND BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-WHAT IS A BIRD FAMILY?
-
-
-IN the "First Book of Birds" I told you about the common life of a bird;
-what sort of a home he has, and how he is taken care of when little;
-then how he lives when grown up; what he eats; where he sleeps; and
-something about how he is made.
-
-In this book, I want to help you a step further on in your study of
-birds. I shall tell you something about particular birds, about the
-families they belong to, and the different ways in which they live.
-
-To begin with: What is a bird family? In life, a bird family is exactly
-like a human family. It consists of father, mother, and children. But in
-the books, a family means quite another thing.
-
-Men who study the Science of Birds, or Ornithology, have placed the
-birds in groups which they call families, to make it easier to find out
-about them, and write about them. This way of arranging them in books is
-called classification--or forming them into classes.
-
-Birds are classified, not by the way they look, but by the way they are
-made, or their structure, and this is found out by the study of
-Scientific Ornithology. Birds may look a good deal alike, and act alike,
-and yet be differently made.
-
-There is first the grand class AVES, which includes all creatures who
-wear feathers. This class is divided into orders.
-
-Orders are made by putting together a large number of birds who are
-alike in one thing. For instance, all birds who have feet made to clasp
-a perch, and so are perchers, are put in an order together.
-
-But many birds have feet for perching who are very different in other
-ways. So orders are divided into families, which I shall tell you about
-in this book.
-
-In each family I shall tell you about one or more of the best known, or
-the ones you are most likely to see, and that will help you to know the
-rest of the family when you begin to study birds out of doors, and use
-the manual to learn the names.
-
-I shall often speak of what has been found out about the food of birds,
-and I want to tell you here, once for all, how it was done, so that you
-may understand just what I mean when I speak of the work of the
-Department of Agriculture. The Government of the United States has in
-Washington a department with a head and many men under him, whose
-business it is to take charge of everything concerning agriculture, that
-is, farming, fruit-growing, etc. This is called the Department of
-Agriculture.
-
-Farmers and fruit-growers made so much complaint of the damage done to
-crops by birds, that this department determined to find out just what
-birds do eat. The only way it could be done was by having the birds
-killed and seeing what food was in their stomachs, for it is almost
-impossible to tell by watching them. To know positively which birds do
-harm by eating more grain or fruit than insects, and which do good by
-eating more insects, would save the lives of many thousands. So the
-killing of those they studied was useful to the whole race.
-
-When they wanted to find out what crows eat, they had crows killed all
-over the country--hundreds of them--and the stomachs, with the food in,
-sent to them in Washington. Then they went to work and examined every
-one. They could tell by the shells of seeds and the hard parts of
-insects, and bones and hair of mice, etc., just what had been eaten. And
-the contents of every stomach was written down and preserved in a book.
-Thus, you see, they could tell what crows were in the habit of feeding
-upon.
-
-They did this with many other birds who are said to do harm,--hawks,
-owls, blackbirds, kingbirds, and others. That is how we come to know
-what birds eat, and can tell whether they do harm or good. There can be
-no mistake in this way of knowing, and so what comes from this
-department may be relied upon as true.
-
-I want this little book to help the bird-lovers in the South and West of
-our big country, as well as in the East; and so, in each Family, I shall
-try to tell about a bird who may be seen in each part. A good many of
-our birds are found both East and West, with slight differences, but
-some that are in one part are not in the other.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE THRUSH FAMILY
-
-(_Turdidæ_)[2]
-
-
-THIS family is named after the thrushes, but our familiar robin belongs
-to it, and also the sweet-voiced bluebird. The birds of this family are
-all rather good sized, and excepting the bluebird show no bright colors.
-Nearly all of them have spotted breasts when young, and many of them
-keep the spots all their lives. Young robins and bluebirds have spots on
-breasts and shoulders, but when they get their grown-up plumage there
-are none to be seen.
-
-The thrush family get around by hopping, and do not walk, though some of
-them run, as you have seen the robin do on the lawn. Most of them live
-in the woods, and feed on the ground, and all of them eat insects.
-Because their feeding grounds freeze up in winter, most of these birds
-go to a warmer climate, or migrate. They are all good singers, and some
-of them among the best in America.
-
-The best known of this family is the robin, AMERICAN ROBIN, to give him
-his whole name. He is found all over the United States. In the summer he
-lives in the Eastern and Middle States, in the winter he lives in the
-Southern States, and he lives all the year round in California.
-
-The California robin is called the Western Robin, and is a little
-lighter in color than his Eastern brother; but he is the same jolly
-fellow under his feathers, and robin song is about the same from the
-Atlantic to the Pacific.
-
-I'm sure you all know how he looks, with black head, slate-colored back
-and wings, streaked throat, and dull red or chestnut breast. His mate is
-not quite so dark in color.
-
-Robins start for their nesting-place, which is their real home, very
-early, almost the first of the birds. They make a nest, not very high,
-in a tree or about our houses, with a good deal of mud in it. Not all
-nests are alike. Sometimes a bird will show a fancy for a pretty-looking
-nest. I have seen one made of the white flowers of life-everlasting. The
-stems were woven together for the framework, and the little clusters of
-blossoms left outside for ornament.
-
-The young robin just out of the nest is a pretty fellow, with spots all
-over his breast and shoulders. He spends most of his time calling for
-food, for he is always hungry. He is rather clumsy in getting about, and
-often falls to the ground. But if you pick him up and put him on a low
-branch out of the reach of cats, he will fly as soon as your hand leaves
-him, and generally come to the ground again. So it is of no use to try
-to help him that way. The only thing you can do is to keep cats and bad
-boys away from him, until he flies up into a tree.
-
-The robin gets his food on the ground, or just under the surface. He
-eats many caterpillars and grubs that are harmful to us. One that he
-specially likes is the cutworm, which has a bad way of biting off young
-plants. In the East he eats many earthworms, which we see him pull out
-of the ground on the lawn, but in the West, where there are not so many
-earthworms, he picks up insects of various kinds.
-
-All through spring, when insects are hard at work destroying our fruit
-and vegetables and young grains, the robin spends almost his whole time
-catching them; first for his own eating, but many more when his little
-ones get out of the shell, for young birds eat a great amount of food.
-Then, when he has spent months in our service killing insects, so that
-our fruit and vegetables can grow, do you not think he has earned part
-of the cherries he has saved?
-
-Robins are very easily made tame, and, when well treated and not shut up
-in a cage, they become fond of people and like to live in our houses. I
-know of a robin who was picked up from the ground by a lady. He could
-not fly, and she took him into a house and brought him up. He was never
-wild or afraid of people, and he never wanted to be free. His mistress
-would sometimes put him on her hat, without fastening him in any way,
-and go out to walk with him there. He liked his ride, and never thought
-of leaving her. She often took him with her into a piece of woods where
-she went. He would play around on the ground and in the trees, but the
-moment she started for home he flew down, ready to go.
-
-She thought perhaps he would like to be free, and she tried once or
-twice to leave him in this pleasant grove, but he always flew to her and
-refused to be left. He was so fond of his mistress that when she went
-away for a day or two he was very unhappy, hid himself in a closet, and
-would not eat till she came back.
-
-This robin, too, liked the food of the family, and did not care for
-earthworms. In fact, he could hardly be coaxed to eat one of them,
-though he liked some kinds of grubs which he found on the ground. But he
-ate them in a different way from his wild brothers. He did not swallow
-them whole, but beat them to a jelly before trying to eat.
-
-This pet had a sweet, low song of his own. He never sang like his wild
-brothers until his second year, when he had been out and heard them
-sing.
-
-A pair of robins that were blown from a nest in a high wind were reared
-and kept in a large cage by Mrs. Grinnell in California. The first year
-the singer did not sing, but in the second year a wild mockingbird came
-to teach him. He would alight on the cage, which hung out of doors, and
-sing softly a long time, till the robin began to do the same. When he
-could sing, it was more like a mockingbird than like a robin. The mocker
-was very fond of his pupil, and used to bring him berries and other wild
-dainties.
-
-These robins made a nest of things the mistress gave them, and eggs
-began to appear in it. But as soon as one was laid, one of the birds
-would jump into the nest and kick and scratch till it was thrown out and
-broken. They seemed to think the pretty blue eggs were playthings. When
-the weather grew hot, Bobby, the singer, showed his sense by spending
-most of his time lying in his bathing-dish, covered with water up to his
-ears. He would lie there an hour at a time, too comfortable to get out
-even to eat.
-
-[Illustration: HERMIT THRUSH]
-
-Birds who are not brought into the house often become tame when well
-treated. One family in Michigan had a pair of robins who nested close to
-the house for fourteen years. It was plain that the birds were the same
-pair, for they became so friendly that they let any of the family pick
-up a nestling, and showed no fear. But with other people they were as
-wild as any robins.
-
-One day a man passing by picked up one of the young birds, who was
-scrambling about on the ground. At once the parents began loud cries of
-distress, and all the robins in the neighborhood came to help. They
-scolded and cried, and flew at the thief who wanted to carry off the
-baby. One of the family heard the row, and went out and claimed the
-robin, and the man gave it up. The moment the little one was in the
-hands of a person they knew, the cries ceased. Not only the parents but
-the neighbors seemed to understand that the nestling was safe.
-
-The way birds act when brought up by us and not by their parents shows
-that young birds are taught many things before they are grown up. When
-living in a house, they are not afraid of cats or people, as wild
-ones are. They do not usually sing the robin song, nor care for the
-robin food, and they do not seem to know how to manage a nest. I could
-tell you many things to prove this.
-
-
-Another charming member of the Thrush Family is the HERMIT THRUSH. He is
-a beautiful bird, smaller than the robin. He is reddish brown on the
-back, with a white breast spotted with dark brown or black. He has
-large, full, dark eyes, which look straight at you.
-
-The hermit thrush spends his winters in the Southern States, and his
-summers in the Northern. But in the far West, where are no cold winters,
-the hermit does not have to move back and forth. In that part of the
-country the bird is the Western Hermit Thrush.
-
-This bird is one of our finest singers, and a very shy bird. His home is
-in the woods, and from there we hear his loud, clear song, morning and
-evening. Many people think his song is the finest bird-song we have. His
-ordinary call as he goes about is a kind of "chuck." The Western hermit
-differs hardly at all. He may be a little smaller, but he is the same
-delightful singer and lovely character.
-
-The mother hermit makes her nest on the ground, and hides it so well
-that it is hard to find,--though I'm afraid snakes, and squirrels, and
-other woods creatures who like eggs to eat find it more often than we
-do.
-
-Shy as the hermit is, he is an intelligent bird. A mother hermit a few
-years ago strayed into the grounds of a gentleman in Massachusetts and
-built a nest under a pine-tree. When she was found, she was at first
-very much frightened. But the owner of the place was a bird-lover, and
-gentle and quiet in his ways, and she got so used to him that she let
-him photograph her many times.
-
-A gentleman, Mr. Owen, once captured a young hermit thrush so lately out
-of the nest that he could not fly much. He kept him in the house several
-weeks, and found out many interesting things about young thrushes. One
-thing he discovered was that the bird has his own notions about food. He
-ate raw meat and earthworms. But when worms were fed to him that came
-from a dirty place, he threw them out of his mouth, wiped his beak, and
-showed great disgust. The worms brought from clean garden earth he ate
-greedily.
-
-The little captive had his own way of eating a worm. He began by
-worrying it awhile, and then swallowed it tail first.
-
-He showed his instinct for sleeping high by being very restless at
-night, till let out of his cage. Then he flew to the highest perch he
-could find in the room, and roosted for the night.
-
-The bird showed himself friendly and not at all afraid of people. Mr.
-Owen got so attached to him that when he let him go in the woods he felt
-as if he had parted with a dear friend.
-
-In the picture you see two hermit thrushes. The upper one is singing,
-and the lower one looking calmly at you, in the way of these beautiful
-birds.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[2] See Appendix, 1.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE KINGLET AND GNATCATCHER FAMILY
-
-(_Sylviidæ_)[3]
-
-
-THIS family is small in our country. There are only three members of it
-that we are likely to see. But they are most dainty and lovely birds.
-They are the two kinglets or little kings, not much bigger than
-hummingbirds, and the blue-gray gnatcatcher, about as small. They are
-all fond of living in the tops of tall trees, and they generally get
-their food and make their pretty nests away out of our reach. So we have
-to look sharp to see them. It is easier to hear them, for they are fine
-singers.
-
-
-The RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET is a plump little bird in olive-green feathers.
-Below he is yellowish white, and he has two whitish wing bars. On top of
-his head is a narrow stripe of bright ruby color. But we see him usually
-from below, so that is not often noticed. He flits about the upper
-branches, picking out the smallest insects and insect eggs, and eating
-them. So he is very useful to us.
-
-[Illustration: RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET]
-
-Although this bird is found all over our country, he does not nest with
-us, except sometimes in the mountains. He goes farther north, beyond the
-United States. The nests that have been found in the mountains of
-Colorado and Montana were partly hanging, and very large for such a tiny
-bird. They were made of soft, fine bark strips, and green moss, and hung
-to the end of a spruce or pine branch.
-
-But the ruby-crown passes his winters in the Southern States and Mexico,
-and when he starts for his nesting-home, he begins to sing. As he goes
-north, he stops a few days or a week in a place, and then is the time to
-hear his sweet voice. When he sings, you would hardly know him. He
-raises the red feathers on top of his head so that they stand up like a
-crown, and change his looks very much. In the picture you can see a
-little of the ruby stripe.
-
-Not much is known of the habits of these little birds, they are so hard
-to study. They are found all over the United States, in the Southern
-States and California in winter, and in the Northern States in spring
-and fall, when migrating.
-
-The BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER is a slim little bird, with a rather long
-tail. He is bluish gray, with some white and black on head, wings, and
-tail, and he is grayish white below.
-
-He has a sweet song, but it is so low you have to be very near and very
-quiet to hear it. He is such a talkative, restless fellow, however, that
-you often see him when you might not hear the song.
-
-The gnatcatcher is one of the most lively of birds. He bustles about in
-an eager way that shows everybody where to look for the nest. And when
-there is no nest, he flits over the tree-tops, catching tiny flying
-insects, and uttering a queer call that sounds something like the mew of
-a cat. He does not need to be so quiet as birds who build on the ground
-or near it, because few can get at the nest. It is too high for snakes
-and boys, and on branches too light for squirrels or big birds. So he
-can afford to be as chatty as he pleases.
-
-The nest of this bird is one of the prettiest that is made. It is a
-little cup, upright on a branch, usually near the end so that it is
-tossed by the wind. Miss Merriam found a pair of gnatcatchers in
-California, and watched them through many troubles. Their way of
-building was by felting. That is, they took fine, soft materials like
-plant down, and packed it all closely together by poking with the beak
-and prodding it with the feet.
-
-A gnatcatcher's nest is large for the size of the bird. It must be deep
-for safety, so that eggs and nestlings will not be thrown out by the
-wind. Three times, Miss Merriam thinks, the little family she watched
-had to build their nest. Each time it took more than ten days of hard
-work.
-
-This pretty little fellow has a long tail, and he keeps it in motion all
-the time. He jerks it up or down, or twitches it to one side or the
-other; or he flirts it open and shut like a fan, which shows the white
-edges and looks very gay.
-
-Dogs and cats, as you know, show how they feel by the way they move the
-tail. Birds do the same, some much more than others. If you watch the
-way in which they move their tails, you can learn to tell how a bird
-feels almost as well as if he could speak to you.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[3] See Appendix, 2.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE NUTHATCH AND CHICKADEE FAMILY
-
-(_Paridæ_)[4]
-
-
-THIS is another family of small birds. The nuthatches are lively,
-restless little creatures. You generally see them scrambling over the
-trunks of trees, head up or head down, as it happens. They are dressed
-in sober colors, and spend their lives picking tiny insects out of the
-crevices of the bark.
-
-
-The WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH is the best known in the East. In California
-the slender-billed takes his place, being about the same in dress and
-manners. Both of them, East and West, go about calling "quank, quank."
-The dress is slate-blue and white, with a white breast, a black cap, and
-black on wings and tail.
-
-Nuthatches nest in holes, either deserted woodpecker nests or natural
-holes in trees. If such a place is not to be found, the pair will
-sometimes dig out a home in a decayed stump for themselves.
-
-It is wonderful to see how easily and quickly a nuthatch will run over
-the trunk and large branches of a tree. Woodpeckers usually go upward,
-and brace themselves with their stiff tails. If they want to go down,
-they back down rather awkwardly. Creepers, who also go over tree trunks,
-go up only, and they also use their stiff tails for a brace. But the
-nuthatch goes head up, or down, or sideways, and never uses the short,
-square tail in the business. He can do this because his claws are very
-curving, almost like hooks, and they grasp tight hold of the little
-rough places in the bark.
-
-It is a funny sight to see a mother nuthatch going about with four or
-five hungry little ones after her, like chickens after a hen, all
-calling their droll little "quanks."
-
-The nuthatch gets his name, it is said, from the habit of fixing a nut
-into a crack and hammering or "hacking" it till it breaks. In summer,
-when insects are to be had, this bird, like many others, eats nothing
-else, and he eats thousands of them. But he can live on other food, so
-he is not forced to migrate.
-
-To provide for winter, when insects will be gone and snow cover the
-seeds, he lays up a store of food. He takes kernels of corn, if he can
-get them, or sunflower seeds, or nuts of various kinds. This keeps him
-very busy all the fall, and he has often been seen at the work. He will
-carry a nut to a tree and find a crack in the bark just big enough to
-hold it. He tries one after another till he finds one to fit. Then he
-hammers it in till it is secure, and leaves it there. Then in winter the
-same bird has been seen, when everything was covered with snow, to dig
-the hidden nuts out of their hiding-places and eat them.
-
-Many birds who do not migrate, but live in the same place the year
-round, provide for winter in the same way. So do squirrels and other
-animals. It is pleasant to think that rough-barked trees, and knotholes,
-and hollows, are filled with food for the hungry birds. And if they had
-not that supply, they might starve, or be obliged to leave us.
-
-
-The RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH is a little smaller than the white-breasted,
-and has a reddish breast. His home is more toward the north, both East
-and West. He nests in Maine and other Northern States. His call note is
-different too. It sounds like the squawk of a toy trumpet. His habits
-are much like those of his bigger relative.
-
-The nuthatch is fond of his mate, and takes good care of her in nesting
-time. He feeds her and the young till they leave the nest.
-
-Mr. Fowler tells a story of an English nuthatch who is almost the same
-as one of ours. Some bird-lovers were in the habit of putting nuts on a
-window-sill for these birds to carry away. One day, to see what they
-would do, somebody put one in a glass tumbler. The birds saw the nut and
-tried to get it through the glass, pecking and hammering at it a long
-time. Finally, one got tired or discouraged and flew up to a perch over
-the tumbler. Then he happened to look down, and saw the nut inside the
-glass. Instantly he came down. He alighted on the edge of the tumbler
-and held on tightly, while he leaned far over inside, almost standing on
-his head, till he picked up the nut and carried it off.
-
-These birds are easily made tame in winter by feeding them every day
-when food is hard to get; and at a time when they are forced to live on
-seeds and nuts, they greatly enjoy scraps of meat, and most of all,
-suet. Many people put out food for the birds every day in winter, in
-some safe place where cats cannot come. They have great pleasure in
-watching their little guests.
-
-[Illustration: BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEES]
-
-Chickadees, or Titmice, as they are named in the books, belong to
-another branch of this Family. There are a good many titmice in the
-world, seventy-five kinds or species, but we in America have only
-thirteen. Best known in the Eastern and Middle States is the common
-chickadee. In California, the mountain chickadee has habits about the
-same, and the Southern States have the tufted titmouse.
-
-All these little fellows are pretty birds in gray, set off with black
-and white, with lovely soft and fluffy plumage.
-
-
-The common CHICKADEE and his brother of the West have black on top of
-the head and on the throat, and white at the side of the head. They nest
-in holes in a tree or stump. If they can find the old home of a
-woodpecker, they are glad to get it, but if they cannot find one, they
-are able to cut one out for themselves, though it is a hard, long job
-for them.
-
-These birds have very large families, sometimes as many as eight or nine
-little chickadees in one of those dark nurseries. How so many can live
-there it is hard to see. They must be all in a heap.
-
-Everybody knows the common call of the chickadee,--"chick-a-dee-dee;"
-but he has a song, too. It is slow, sad-sounding, and of two notes,
-almost like the common cry of the phoebe. But you must not think they
-have no more than these few notes. They have odd little songs, and they
-make queer sounds that seem much like talking. Almost all birds have
-many notes and calls and little chatty noises of different sorts,
-besides their regular song and the common call note. To hear these, and
-learn to know a bird whatever he says, is one of the delights of bird
-study. I hope you will some day enjoy it. The Chippewa Indians named the
-chickadee "kitch-kitch-ga-ne-shi."
-
-A chickadee is a friendly little fellow. Many times one has come down on
-to a man's hand or knee. Mr. Torrey once found a pair making their nest,
-and he climbed up on to a branch of the tree, close by where they were
-working, so as to watch them. Many birds would have been frightened to
-have a man so near, but not the brave little chickadees. They stared at
-him a little, but went right on with their building.
-
-These birds, though so tiny, are among the most useful to us, because
-they spy out and destroy the insect eggs hidden in crevices of bark, or
-under leaves. Bigger birds might not care to pick up such small things,
-or their beaks might be too clumsy to get at them.
-
-When you see a chickadee scrambling over a tree, hanging head down with
-all sorts of antics, he is no doubt hunting out the eggs. These eggs, if
-left, would hatch out into hungry insects, to eat the leaves or fruit,
-or to injure and perhaps kill the tree. The nuthatch clears up the trunk
-and large limbs, and the chickadee does the same for the small branches
-and around the leaves.
-
-It has been found out that one pair of chickadees with their young will
-destroy five hundred pests, such as caterpillars, flies, and grubs,
-every day. No man could do so much, if he gave his whole time to it.
-Besides, he could not go over the whole tree as a bird does, without
-doing harm to it. A chickadee hops along the small branches and twigs,
-looking under every leaf, sometimes hanging head down to see the under
-side, and picks up every insect or egg. Among his dainties are the eggs
-of the leaf-rolling caterpillar, the canker-worm, and the apple-tree
-moth,--all very troublesome creatures.
-
-
-The TUFTED TITMOUSE is more common in the South and West than his
-cousin, the chickadee, and he is one of the prettiest of the family. He
-is dressed in soft gray, with a fine, showy, pointed crest. His ways are
-something like the chickadee's, but he is, perhaps, even bolder and
-more pert, and he is easily tamed. All his notes are loud and clear, and
-he is never for a moment still.
-
-In winter, this bird is found in little flocks of a dozen or more. These
-are probably all of one family, the parents and their two broods of the
-year. He is one of the birds who stores up food for a time when food is
-scarce. In summer, he eats only insects.
-
-The tufted titmouse, like others of his race, has a great deal of
-curiosity. I have heard of one who came into a house through an open
-window. It was a female titmouse in search of a good place for a nest.
-After she had been in all the rooms, and helped herself to whatever she
-found that was good to eat, she seemed to decide that it was a land of
-plenty and she would stay.
-
-The stranger settled upon a hanging basket as nice to build in. The
-family did not disturb her, and she brought in her materials and made
-her nest. She had even laid two or three eggs, when the people began to
-take too much interest in her affairs, and the bird thought it best to
-move to a safer place.
-
-Another of these birds in Ohio, looking about for something nice and
-soft to line her nest, pitched upon a gentleman's hair. Unfortunately,
-he had need of the hair himself; but the saucy little titmouse didn't
-mind that. She alighted on his head, seized a beakful, and then bracing
-herself on her stout little legs, she actually jerked out the lock, and
-flew away with it. So well did she like it that she came back for more.
-The gentleman was a bird-lover, and was pleased to give some of his hair
-to such a brave little creature.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] See Appendix, 3.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE CREEPER FAMILY
-
-(_Certhiidæ_)[5]
-
-
-THIS is a family of birds who creep; that is, they appear not to hop up
-a tree trunk like a woodpecker, or walk up like a nuthatch, but they hug
-close to the bark with claws and tail, and seem really to creep.
-
-
-The one member of the family in this country is called the BROWN
-CREEPER. He is a little fellow in streaks and stripes of brown, and he
-looks so much like the tree trunks that one can hardly see him. He has a
-slender, curved bill, just the thing to poke into cracks in the bark,
-and pull out the insects and eggs hidden there. His tail feathers are
-curious. They have sharp points on the ends, so that he can press them
-against the bark, and help support himself.
-
-The creeper's way of getting up a trunk is to begin near the ground, and
-go round and round the trunk till he reaches the lowest branch. Then he
-flings himself off, and flies to the roots of another tree, and goes up
-that in the same way. A brown creeper once came into a house, and found
-it so comfortable, and food so plentiful, and people so kind, that he
-stayed. He was very tame, and his great pleasure was to climb up a man's
-leg or a woman's skirt, exactly as he climbs a tree trunk, going round
-and round.
-
-[Illustration: BROWN CREEPER]
-
-Quiet and demure as he looks, this little bird sometimes plays rather
-funny pranks. He has been seen to whirl around like a top, and again to
-fly up and down close to a tree trunk, apparently just for fun. He has a
-sweet little song, which we do not often hear, for his voice is not
-strong.
-
-The brown creeper mother takes a droll place for a nest. It is behind
-the loose bark of an old tree. She makes a snug little home under the
-bark roof, and lines it with feathers, and there she brings up her three
-or four little creepers. She is as well protected from sun and rain as
-if she had an umbrella, and it is such an odd place that it was not for
-a long time known where her cunning little nest was made.
-
-This bird nests in the Eastern States, in northern New York and New
-England, and in California he nests in the mountains, but he goes
-South in winter. When he wants to hide, he makes use of a clever trick,
-which shows that he knows how much he looks like the trunk of a tree. He
-simply flattens himself against the bark, and keeps perfectly still.
-Then you can hardly see him, though you look right at him. You can see
-in the picture how he looks.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[5] See Appendix, 4.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY
-
-(_Troglodytidæ_)[6]
-
-FIRST BRANCH
-
-
-THIS is a family of singers, who dress in plain colors. There is not a
-red or blue stripe, and not a yellow or purple feather, among them.
-
-The family has two branches, or subfamilies as the books call them. The
-first branch, which gives the name to the family, is made of birds who
-are really a sort of cave-dwellers,--the wrens.
-
-Wrens are lively little birds, excitable and afraid of nothing. They are
-in plain browns, barred off with another shade of the same color. They
-are so near the color of the ground, where they spend most of their
-time, that they are not easily seen. They have a way of holding their
-tails up, some of them much more than others, by which one may know a
-wren wherever he sees it.
-
-
-The most common one of the family is the HOUSE WREN. He is found all
-over the Eastern States. In the Western States the same bird, except in
-the shade of his coat, is called the Western House Wren.
-
-The house wren is fond of a snug place for a nest. If a wren box is to
-be had, he will take that; but if not, he will seek some cozy nook,
-which he will furnish, mostly with fine twigs, and then wait for his
-mate to appear.
-
-Sometimes the bird takes queer places to live in. I once found a wren
-family inside a hollow iron hitching-post in a city street. The birds
-went in through the hole for the hitching-strap. I wondered how the
-wrenlings would get out through the long, dark passage. Another nest was
-made in an oriole's hanging cradle, after the young orioles had flown.
-It was filled up with sticks to make it suitable for baby wrens. One
-that I found last summer was in a hole in a gate-post.
-
-The place is usually chosen by the male, who stuffs it full of fine
-twigs, and then sings and calls for his mate to come. He will sing hour
-after hour his sweet little song, stopping every few minutes to bring
-another stick to add to his store.
-
-The wren is a droll fellow about one thing,--he never knows when he has
-enough furniture for his house. He will bring twigs and stuff them into
-the box or hole, till he can't get another one in. Sometimes even till
-his mate can't get in herself. A pair began to build in a shed room, and
-apparently set out to fill the whole room with twigs. They brought in so
-much stuff that the owner had to stop up the hole they used for a door
-and make them go somewhere else. He was willing to share the room with
-them, but he couldn't spare the whole.
-
-The house wren is a plucky little fellow, and as he likes the same kind
-of places the English sparrow wants, they often quarrel over a box or a
-nice snug hole. Small as he is, the wren often succeeds in keeping the
-place he wants, and driving the sparrow away.
-
-English sparrows can be kept out of wren houses by making the opening
-too small for the bigger bird. An auger hole one inch in diameter will
-be large enough for wrens, but too small for sparrows. A sparrow has
-sometimes been seen trying to get into one of these wren boxes, and very
-droll he looks, when he sticks his head in, and struggles and kicks
-violently to push himself in.
-
-I found a pair of house wrens in Colorado one summer. The singer spent
-most of his time scrambling about a pile of brush, apparently trying to
-make me think that was where he lived. But I was sure he had a mate and
-a nest somewhere else, and I kept watch for them.
-
-One day I happened to see a little brown bird fly up under the eaves of
-a summer cottage not much bigger than a tent. On looking closely, I
-found that there were openings under the eaves. The birds had taken one
-of these for a door, and built a nest inside, in the box frame over a
-window. After that I looked at them through another window. Everything
-went well till the wrenlings left the nest and began to fly around. Then
-they seemed to lose their wits, or not to mind their parents. They flew
-wildly about in the cottage, bumping against the glass, and seeming not
-able to find the door to get out.
-
-I had not the key to open the big door, so I could not help them in
-their trouble. And the old birds were so frantic when I looked in at the
-window, while they were trying to get their family out, that I went away
-and left them. In an hour or two I went back, and found everything
-quiet, and the wren babies all out on the trees.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[6] See Appendix, 5.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY
-
-SECOND BRANCH
-
-
-THE second branch of this family is very different from the first; it is
-composed of mockingbirds, catbirds, and thrashers. These birds were once
-placed with the thrushes, and by habits and manners they seem to belong
-there. But, as I told you, families in the bird world are made by
-structure,--by the way the bird is made. These birds have scales on the
-leg, and some other things like the wrens, so now they belong to the
-cave-dwelling family, though they never dwell in caves. They live in
-shrubbery and low trees. They are larger than any wren, but they are
-like those birds in being good singers and dressed in plain colors.
-Wherever they are placed in the books, they are interesting and
-delightful birds to know.
-
-
-The most famous of this branch is the MOCKINGBIRD, found in the Southern
-States and California. He is a beautiful and graceful fellow in gray,
-with large white patches in his wings.
-
-The nest of the mockingbird is a rather rough affair, built in a low
-tree or a bush. One that I saw was in a tree about as high as an
-apple-tree. The bird gets his food on the ground, and has a curious
-habit of lifting his wings as he is about to attack a beetle.
-
-The mockingbird is a celebrated singer. Many persons think him the
-finest in America. He is especially famous for repeating the notes of
-other birds; but he can imitate other sounds, such as a policeman's
-rattle, a postman's whistle, and almost anything else. Sometimes a caged
-one makes mischief by this accomplishment. He has no need to borrow, for
-he has a fine song of his own.
-
-Besides being famous in this way, he is a very knowing bird, and a most
-interesting one to study. The young mocker is a spirited fellow, who
-can't endure to stay in the nest till his wings are strong enough to
-bear him. He usually tries to fly too soon, and so comes to the ground.
-Coming to the ground is a great misfortune to the bird, for he is easily
-caught and put in a cage.
-
-Being fine singers, mockingbirds are often kept in cages. In the late
-summer, the bird stores in New York have hundreds of them for sale,
-birds so young that they still wear the speckled bibs of baby-days. Many
-of them die, and so every year they are growing more rare.
-
-[Illustration: CATBIRD]
-
-A lady wrote me the story of a young mockingbird, whose mother saved it
-from a cage. The little fellow was just out of the nest, and could not
-fly far, and a young man thought he would catch him and take him to his
-sister; but the mother bird wished to save him from such a fate.
-
-When the man went toward the youngster on the ground, the mother flew
-down, seized him, lifted him up, and flew away with him. She carried him
-a little way and then let go. He flew as far as he could, but soon came
-to the ground again. Then the man started for him. Again the anxious
-mother flew down and lifted him into the air, and again he flew a little
-and fell to the ground. So it went on for some time, till the young man
-began to feel ashamed of himself. Then he took up the cage and went
-away, leaving the little one to his mother's care.
-
-The mockingbird is one of our most knowing birds, and when one is tamed
-and free in a house, he is very amusing. He is as full of fun as a
-catbird, and as funny to watch. A true story was told in one of the
-papers, of a captive who had some queer tricks. One was hunting in a
-workbox for a paper of needles, taking it down to the floor, and working
-it open, then suddenly giving it a jerk that sent the needles in a
-shower all over the floor.
-
-This bird was once shut up in a room alone, while the family were at
-table. He did not like it, for he wanted to be with them; so he amused
-himself unwinding all the spools of thread in the workbox. He took one
-end of the thread and carried it all about the room, around everything
-and over everything--vases on the shelf, pictures on the wall,
-chair-legs, sofas, and lamps. Everything in the room was tied together,
-so that no one could go in lest something should be thrown down. The
-naughty bird was delighted with his mischief. He sat there singing at
-the top of his voice. The only way the family could get into the room
-was to get scissors and cut their way in. They found empty spools all
-over the floor, and hundreds of yards of thread used.
-
-
-The CATBIRD is dressed in plain slate-color. He is a near relative of
-the mockingbird, and better known in the Eastern States. He is also a
-fine singer, though he is not so famous. This is partly because he sings
-usually from the middle of a thick bush and so is not seen, and partly
-because he does not sing so loud. There is a great charm in the
-catbird's song.
-
-The catbird is a charming fellow aside from his music. He is as knowing
-as the mockingbird, and not much afraid of people. He will come near to
-houses to nest, and if not frightened or disturbed, he will be very
-familiar.
-
-Like many other birds, the catbird is kind to others in trouble. A pair
-had a nest near that of a pair of robins. One day the robins
-disappeared--killed, no doubt--and the young in the nest began to cry.
-When one of the catbirds came with food for its own nestlings, the robin
-babies would cry to be fed too. Pretty soon the catbirds began to feed
-them. And at night, when bird babies need to be covered up by the warm
-feather-bed of their mother's breast, one of the friendly catbirds
-filled her place, and kept them warm all night. So it went on till both
-families were grown up and could fly.
-
-One writer says: "All day long the catbird watches over the fruit-trees,
-and kills the insects that would destroy them or the fruit. Of course he
-takes his share, especially of cherries, but for every one he takes, he
-eats thousands of insects. Where there are no small birds, there will be
-no fruit." Thirty grasshoppers have been found in one small catbird's
-stomach by the Department of Agriculture.
-
-A story showing how much the catbird knows and understands is of one in
-Iowa who had a nest in some vines over a porch. A tornado tore the vines
-so as to uncover the nest, and the lady of the house feared some one
-would disturb it. So she began to draw the vines together around it to
-hide it. While she was doing this, one of the old birds came and began
-to shriek, and cry, and fly round her head, threatening to dash at her
-eyes. The mate came too, and acted in the same way, supposing, no doubt,
-that she was doing some harm to their nest. She shielded her head and
-finished the work, and went into the house.
-
-The next morning she was sitting on the balcony the other side of the
-house. All at once a catbird flew down and perched on the railing within
-six feet of her, which no catbird had ever done before. She kept still,
-and he began jerking his body and uttering sweet little calls and
-twitters, turning his head this side and that, with eyes fixed on her.
-He acted exactly as if he were talking to her, and after a while he
-broke out with a song, low and very sweet. She sat still, and after the
-song he began his twittering again, then sang once more. She had never
-heard anything so beautiful, and she was sure that he was trying to
-express his thanks to her, and his regrets at the way he had treated her
-the day before. At least, that was the way it seemed to her.
-
-A catbird is as full of fun and pranks as a mockingbird. He may
-sometimes be seen to do what looks like playing jokes on others. A lady
-told me she saw a catbird drive a crow nearly wild by mocking his "caw."
-He cawed as well as the crow himself, and the crow was furious, dashing
-down at his small tormentor, and in every way showing anger at what no
-doubt seemed a great insult.
-
-
-The THRASHER, or BROWN THRUSH, is also of this family. He is reddish
-brown on the back, and heavily spotted on the breast, and he has a long
-tail which he jerks about a good deal.
-
-He is known all over the Eastern and Southern States, and his California
-brother is almost exactly like him. He is a fine singer, and has been
-called the French mockingbird. Sometimes it is hard to tell his song
-from the mockingbird's.
-
-The thrasher's nest is usually made in a bush, the thickest and
-thorniest that can be found, and the brave little parents will make a
-great fight to keep their nestlings from harm. At one time, when a boy
-went to carry off some young thrashers, the old birds called together
-quite an army of birds to help defend them. There were at least fifty
-birds of many kinds, all flying around his head, screaming at him and
-trying to pick at his eyes. The boy was ashamed, and put back the little
-ones, glad to get away with his eyes safe.
-
-A Western bird, the Arizona thrasher, builds a nest in the middle of a
-cactus so full of sharp thorns like fine needles that it is a wonder how
-the birds can get into it. They pull off the thorns to make a passage,
-but the nestlings do sometimes get caught and die there. They must,
-however, be safe from most enemies. One pair that Mr. Palmer tells about
-built a regular hallway of sticks six or eight inches long.
-
-All the birds of this family have great individuality; that is, no two
-are alike. The better you know birds, the more you will see that they do
-not act, or sing, or even look exactly alike. That is one reason why
-they are so interesting to study.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE DIPPER FAMILY
-
-(_Cinclidæ_)[7]
-
-
-THERE is only one member of this family in the United States, and that
-one lives in the Rocky Mountains and the mountains of California. It is
-the AMERICAN DIPPER, or WATER OUZEL.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN DIPPER]
-
-The body of the ouzel is about as big as a robin's, but looks much
-smaller, because his very short tail gives him a "chunky" look. His
-wings are short and rounded, and his plumage is very soft and so thick
-that he can go under water without getting wet. He is slate-color all
-over, a little paler on the breast, and his mate is exactly like him,
-but the young ouzel has all the under feathers tipped with white, and
-usually a white throat. Both old and young have shining white eyelids
-which show very plainly among their dark feathers.
-
-The dipper is a water lover. The nest is placed close to it,
-generally near a waterfall, sometimes even behind a waterfall, where he
-has to go through a curtain of falling water to reach it. It is on a
-shelf of rock, and shaped like a little hut, with a hole on one side for
-a door. It is made of soft green moss, which is kept alive and growing
-by constant sprinkling. Sometimes the waterfall itself keeps it wet, but
-the birds have been seen to sprinkle it themselves. They do it by diving
-into the water, then going to the top of the nest and shaking themselves
-violently.
-
-This bird is a curious fellow. His food is the small insects which live
-under water, and he is as much at home there as other birds are in the
-air. He can walk on the bottom with swift running water over his head,
-and he can really fly under water, using his wings as he does in the
-air. I have seen him do it.
-
-The water ouzel cares nothing for the cold. On cold mornings when all
-other birds sit humped up with feathers puffed out over their feet to
-keep warm, he is as jolly and lively as ever. He flies about in the
-snow, dives under the ice, and comes out at an airhole, and sings as if
-it were summer weather.
-
-Mr. John Muir, who knows so well the Western mountains and the creatures
-who live there, has told us most of what we know about this bird. He
-says the ouzel sings all winter, and never minds the weather; also that
-he never goes far from the stream. If he flies away, he flies close over
-the brook, and follows all its windings and never goes "across lots."
-
-When the young ouzel is out of the nest and wants to be fed, he stands
-on a rock and "dips," that is, bends his knees and drops, then stands up
-straight again. He looks very droll.
-
-Dr. Merriam tells a story which shows how fond the dipper is of water,
-especially of a sprinkle, and explains why he always chooses to live by
-a waterfall. The doctor was camping out on the bank of a stream where
-one of these birds lived, and one morning he threw some water out of a
-cup. Instantly the bird flew into the little shower as if he liked it.
-To see if he really wanted to get into the water, the doctor threw out
-some more. Again the bird flew into it, and as long as he would throw
-out water, the ouzel would dash in for his sprinkle.
-
-Besides showing that the water ouzel likes water, this little story
-shows another thing,--that birds are not naturally afraid of us. On
-far-off islands where men have seldom been, birds do not run away from
-people. They have not learned to fear them. They will come up to men,
-perch on their shoulders, and ride with them on their boats. I have read
-that in Norway, where everybody is kind to birds, they are not at all
-afraid. They will come into a barn or a house when the weather is cold,
-or they are hungry, and no man or boy thinks of frightening or hurting
-them.
-
-Mr. C. Lloyd Morgan has reared many birds by hatching the eggs in an
-incubator, so that they cannot be taught by their parents. He says that
-the birds of the wildest parents hatched in that way are never afraid of
-people who move quietly, or of a cat, or a quiet dog. Any sudden
-movement startles a young bird, but they are as much afraid of a dead
-leaf blown by the wind as they are of a hawk. It is the suddenness that
-alarms them. Some of them stop instantly on a sudden noise, like a
-sneeze or a cough. If one foot happens to be raised to step, they will
-hold it so, and if the head is one side, it will stay so, exactly as if
-they were all turned to stone.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] See Appendix, 6.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-THE WAGTAIL FAMILY
-
-(_Motacillidæ_)[8]
-
-
-IT does not seem very polite to call a family of birds wagtails, just
-because they have the habit of jerking their tails as they go about. But
-that is the name they go by in the books, and we have two of them in the
-United States. We call them pipits or titlarks.
-
-
-The best known is SPRAGUE'S PIPIT, called the Missouri skylark, or
-sometimes the prairie skylark. This bird gets the name of skylark
-because he sings while soaring about in the air far over our heads. He
-could not sing on a tree if he wanted to, for he lives on the plains
-between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains, where are few or
-no trees.
-
-[Illustration: SPRAGUE'S PIPIT]
-
-The pipits live on the ground, and walk and run, not hop. As they go,
-they bob their heads, and jerk their tails. They are a little larger
-than an English sparrow, and they go in flocks. They are never seen in
-the woods, but in open pastures or plains, or beside a road.
-
-Sprague's Pipit is all in streaks of brown and gray, and lighter below.
-He has a large foot, which shows that he lives on the ground, and a very
-long claw on the hind toe.
-
-The nest of the pipit is made by hollowing out a little place in the
-ground and lining it with fine grasses. Though on the ground, it is one
-of the hardest to find, because it is lightly covered with the dry
-grasses, and when the bird is sitting, she matches the grasses so well
-that one can hardly see her, even when looking right at her.
-
-The birds eat insects and weed seeds, and go about in flocks. Even then
-they are hard to see, because when they are startled they do not flutter
-or fly, but crouch or squat at once, and stay perfectly still.
-
-This bird is noted, as I said, for his song. It is said to be as fine as
-that of the English skylark of which we hear so much. Perhaps his way of
-singing makes it still more interesting. He starts up on wing, flies a
-little one way, then the other, all the time going higher and higher. So
-he climbs on up, up, up, in a zigzag way, till he is fairly out of
-sight, all the time giving a wonderfully sweet song. It is not very
-loud, but of such a kind that it is heard when the bird is far out of
-sight. When he can no longer be seen, one may still follow him with a
-good field-glass. He will sing without stopping for fifteen or twenty
-minutes.
-
-Then suddenly he stops, closes his wings, and comes head first towards
-the ground. It seems as if he would dash his brains out against the
-earth, but just before he touches, he opens his wings and alights like a
-feather, almost where he started from. He should be as famous as the
-English bird, and will be, no doubt, when he is better known.
-
-One of the things which make bird-study so interesting to us is that
-there is so much to be found out about our birds. European birds have
-been studied much longer, but we have still many beautiful ones whose
-manners and ways of living are almost unknown. These things are left for
-you young folk to find out when you are grown up.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] See Appendix, 7.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-THE WARBLER FAMILY
-
-(_Mniotiltidæ_)[9]
-
-
-THE gayest, the liveliest, and almost the smallest of our birds are the
-warblers. Some of them are not over five inches long from the tip of the
-beak to the end of the tail. Almost all wear bright colors, and the pair
-are never alike, while the youngsters are different from both.
-
-But few of them warble. Then why are they named so? Well, I haven't
-found out; but we must call them warblers because that is their name in
-the books. Most of them have funny little songs of a few notes, which
-they jerk out every minute as they scramble about on the trees.
-
-We have seventy species of these little birds in the United States, and
-every one is working as hard as he can from morning till night, for our
-benefit. For every one eats insects, and enormous numbers of them. Some
-scramble over trees and pick them out from bud and blossom and under
-leaves, others go over the bark, and others fly out like flycatchers.
-
-Some of them work in the tops of tall trees, others work in the
-orchards, some in bushes, and some on the ground. But wherever they
-live, they are beautiful to look at, and bewitching to study.
-
-Though they are little, they have plenty of spirit. I know of one kept
-in a room with several other birds, all bigger than himself. You might
-think he would be treated as big boys would treat a little one. But no,
-indeed! the tiny fellow made himself ruler of the whole party. He took
-the biggest bathing-dish, the best seed-cup, and the most desirable
-perch, and drove away any big bird who dared to claim either.
-
-
-The YELLOW WARBLER, found all over the country, is often called the wild
-canary, for, as you see him fly, he appears to be entirely yellow, but
-when you get nearer, you will see that on his breast are fine stripes of
-reddish brown. His mate is all in yellow-olive color.
-
-They are very sweet little creatures, and make one of the prettiest
-nests in America. It is usually in an upright fork of a tree, or bush.
-It is made of fine material, among the rest a good deal of a gray silky
-stuff which gives it a beautiful look.
-
-This bird is one of the few who will not bring up a cowbird baby. When
-the tiny mother finds a cowbird's egg in her nest, she builds another
-story on top of the nest, leaving the egg to spoil. Sometimes a cowbird
-finds the second nest, and then the warbler adds a third story. Nests
-have been found three stories high, with a dried-up cowbird egg in each
-of the two lower stories.
-
-A strange thing happened once to a pair of yellow warblers. When the
-nest was done and the eggs laid, a storm threw it out of place, and
-tipped it over to one side, so that the little mother did not dare trust
-it for a cradle. So she built another nest in the same bush, and went to
-sitting on that.
-
-One day a bird-lover chanced to see the two nests, one with the bird
-sitting, the other tipped partly over and left with the eggs still in
-it. To see what the birds would do, he put the fallen nest back in
-place, and made it firm, and then went away. The little pair looked at
-the nest, and had a great deal of chatter over it. It was their own nest
-and their own eggs, but the mother could not sit in two places.
-
-Finally, the singer took his place on the restored nest. After that it
-was watched, and the two birds sat on the two nests till all the young
-were hatched, and then fed and reared them. When they were ready to fly,
-the happy birds had a big family to take care of.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Besides these tiny fellows that we call warblers, there are four bigger
-birds classed with the family, who do not look or act like warblers.
-They are the golden-crowned thrush or oven-bird, the water-thrush, the
-Louisiana water-thrush, and the yellow-breasted chat.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT]
-
-
-The OVEN-BIRD gets his name from the nest, which is shaped like an
-old-fashioned oven. It is on the ground in the woods, often on the side
-of a little slope. It has a roof over it covered with sticks and leaves
-like the ground around it, so that it is hard to see.
-
-If you were to see this bird walking about on the ground, as he does,
-you would think him a thrush. He is something the same color, and he has
-a speckled breast like a thrush. His mate is dressed in the same way,
-and they have a dull yellowish stripe over the crown.
-
-He is the fellow you hear in the woods, calling "Teacher! teacher!
-teacher!" He is found all over the United States east of the Rocky
-Mountains.
-
-
-The YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT is perhaps the drollest bird in North America.
-He is a beautiful bird, nearly as large as an oriole, olive green above
-and brilliant yellow below, and his mate is the same. He is found all
-over the country south of the latitude of Massachusetts. In the West and
-California, the chat is a little more gray in color, and has a longer
-tail. He is called the long-tailed chat, but a chat is the same funny
-fellow, wherever he is found.
-
-He reminds one of a clown, he plays so many antics, and makes such queer
-sounds, hardly in the least like a song. He will whistle, bark like a
-puppy, mew like a cat, or laugh like an old man, all in a loud, strange
-voice.
-
-Besides this, the chat is a ventriloquist, that is, can make his voice
-appear to come from some place far off, when he is near, and so fool us.
-The chat has a way of flying up into the air with wings fluttering and
-legs dangling as if they were not well fastened on, and looking as if he
-would fall to pieces himself. He does not like to be seen, either. He
-prefers to hide in a thick bush, and make all sorts of strange noises to
-deceive one.
-
-The one thing a chat hates more than anything else is to have his nest
-found. I have known a chat to desert a nest with three lovely eggs in
-it, just because it was looked at, though neither nest nor eggs were
-touched.
-
-I found that nest myself, and I wanted very much to see how the birds
-live and bring up the little ones, so I was careful not to disturb
-anything. I hid myself a long way off, where I could see the nest with a
-field-glass, and where I thought the birds would not notice me. I sat
-there perfectly still for hours, till the eggs had time to get cold, and
-I saw another bird carry them off. No doubt they saw me, however, for
-they never came back to the nest.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] See Appendix, 8.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-THE VIREO FAMILY
-
-(_Vireonidæ_)[10]
-
-
-THE vireos are a small family, fifty species, found only in America.
-They are very quietly dressed in greenish olive hues, with hardly a
-bright color among them. They were once called greenlets.
-
-They all live in trees and catch insects, going about over the twigs.
-They sing as they go, like the warblers, combining work and play. Some
-of them sing almost without stopping, and it gets to be rather tiresome
-after a while. One or two of them even sing on the nest, which hardly
-another bird does.
-
-The vireos make the prettiest nests. They are swinging baskets, hung
-between the forks of a twig, and usually near the end, where they rock
-in every breeze. They are not often very high. The birds are easily
-tamed by one who is quiet, and careful not to frighten them.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-THROATED VIREO AND NEST]
-
-Mr. Torrey found a vireo on her nest, and by gentle ways got her to let
-him stroke her. Next day he took some rose leaves with aphides on them,
-and holding one of the insects on his finger, he offered it to the bird
-on the nest. She took it, and then another and another, till finally she
-began to be very eager for them, and he could hardly feed her fast
-enough. Then he took a teaspoon full of water up to her, and she drank.
-
-
-Another gentleman--Mr. Hoffmann--did still more. He coaxed a
-YELLOW-THROATED VIREO till she took food out of his lips. Black ants and
-cankerworms were the things he fed her. She preferred the ants, and
-would scold him a little at first when he offered the worms, though she
-took them at last. This bird was so tame she would let a man lift her
-off her nest and put her on his shoulder while he looked at the eggs.
-She would stay there till he put her back.
-
-The yellow-throat, besides making a pretty hanging basket, covers the
-outside with lichens of different colors, green, dark and light, yellow,
-and almost black. It is said that these pretty things are put on by the
-male while his mate is sitting.
-
-A pair was once watched at their building. The female was lining and
-shaping the inside, and her mate working silky-looking strips from
-plants into the framework, and then covering the whole with lichens. He
-was so happy, he sang as he worked.
-
-
-The one of this family most widely spread over the country, from the
-Atlantic to the Pacific, is the WARBLING VIREO. His song is the most
-agreeable of the vireo songs, being truly a warble of six or eight
-notes, of which one does not get tired. The dress of the Western
-warbling vireo is a little paler, but the habits and manners are about
-the same as those of his Eastern brother.
-
-Vireos were once common in the shade-trees of our city streets, and are
-still in some places where English sparrows have not taken everything,
-and boys are not allowed to throw stones or shoot. I know one city in
-Massachusetts where trees are very lovely and musical with
-yellow-throats.
-
-We can still have these and other birds in our yards--we who do not live
-in the middle of a big city--by protecting them from cats and bad boys,
-and furnishing good places to nest. Mr. Lloyd Morgan tells of a garden
-near his own where there were fifty-three nests, besides swallows'. The
-owner planted thick bushes, and some cone-bearing trees. He put
-bird-boxes and old flower-pots and other things suitable to build in, in
-convenient places in the trees. The birds appreciated all this and came
-and stayed with him.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[10] See Appendix, 9.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-THE SHRIKE FAMILY
-
-(_Laniidæ_)[11]
-
-
-A SHRIKE is a pretty gray bird with white and black trimmings. He is
-nearly as large as a robin, and has a bill slightly hooked on the end.
-This is to help catch living prey, for he eats mice and other little
-mammals, besides grasshoppers, crickets, and sometimes small birds.
-
-This family have a curious habit of sticking dead grasshoppers, or mice,
-or other food, on a thorn, to keep till they are wanted. Because of this
-habit they have been called butcher-birds.
-
-
-The LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE, who is perhaps the most widely known, builds a
-bulky nest in a tree, and is very attentive to his mate while she is
-sitting. She looks exactly like him.
-
-He is a very quiet bird, and three or four or more of them may often be
-seen in a little party together, flying and hopping about in a tree, or
-on the ground, in the most amiable way. This shrike is a sweet singer,
-too. The song is not loud, but very pleasing.
-
-[Illustration: LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE]
-
-A great deal that is not true has been said about this bird. Some people
-seem to think he is in the habit of tormenting and killing little birds
-for fun, and he is called many hard names. But he does not deserve them.
-His way of keeping his food has been spoken of as if it were a crime. He
-lives generally on crickets, grasshoppers, meadow mice, and small
-snakes, besides cut-worms, cankerworms, and many others. He is extremely
-useful to farmers and cultivators on that account.
-
-Sometimes, when other food is scarce, he eats small birds, but they are
-by no means his usual food. I have watched a family of shrikes several
-times, and always looked very sharply to see if they touched birds. I
-have seen them eat many sorts of insects and grubs, and meadow mice, but
-never saw one disturb a bird. Other people who have watched them closely
-have told that their experience was the same. And writers about birds
-who study for themselves, and do not merely repeat what others have
-said, generally agree that the bird kills his prey before he impales it.
-More than that, the number of birds he kills is very small compared to
-the hosts of troublesome insects and small animals he eats.
-
-The conclusion of the Agricultural Department as to the food of shrikes
-all over the country is that it consists mainly of grasshoppers, and
-that the good they do is much greater than the harm, and therefore they
-should be protected.
-
-Mr. Keyser once saw a shrike catch a meadow mouse, and carry it up into
-a tree. First he killed it, and then tried to wedge it into a crotch so
-that he could eat it. But finally he found the sharp end of a broken
-snag, on which he fastened it.
-
-There is no doubt that the shrike impales his prey so that he can pull
-it to pieces to eat, for his feet are too small to hold it. I have seen
-a shrike throw a dead meadow mouse over a fence wire that had sagged to
-the ground, in order to get bits off to eat.
-
-A lady in New Hampshire who had a captive shrike tells in "Bird-Lore"
-that he was unable to eat a piece of meat until he could find a place to
-fasten it. He hopped around the room, looking for something, till she
-guessed what he wanted. Then she brought a kitchen fork with two tines.
-The moment he saw it he ran to her, hopped up on her hand, jerked his
-meat over the tines, and at once began to eat.
-
-An interesting little action of one of these birds was seen by a
-gentleman traveling in Florida last winter. Wishing to have one of the
-birds to add to a collection, he shot one (I'm sorry to say). The bird
-was not killed, but wounded so that he could not fly. As the man came
-near to pick it up, the poor fellow gave a cry of distress, and
-fluttered away on his broken wing with great difficulty.
-
-His call for help was heard. Another shrike at once flew down from a
-tree, and went to his aid. He flew close around him and under him, in
-some way holding him up as he was about to fall. He helped him so well
-that the two began to rise in the air, and before the eyes of the
-surprised hunter, at last got safely into the top of a tall tree, where
-he left them.
-
-If you ever happen to find a shrike nesting, I hope you will watch the
-birds for yourself, and see how they act, and not take the word of any
-one about them. Then you will really know them. The picture shows a
-shrike as I have often seen one, sitting on the top twig of the tree
-that holds his nest, watching to see that no harm comes to it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[11] See Appendix, 10.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-THE WAXWING FAMILY
-
-(_Ampelidæ_)[12]
-
-
-THE waxwings are a family of beautiful birds, with elegant pointed
-crests, and wonderfully silky plumage. Excepting one species they are in
-soft grayish or reddish brown colors, with yellow tips to their tails
-and black lines on the head that look like spectacles, and give them a
-wise appearance.
-
-
-Best known is the CEDAR WAXWING, or CEDAR-BIRD. He is a citizen at
-large, you may say, for he is known from sea to sea, and from Canada to
-Mexico. He nests all over the northern parts, and winters in the
-southern parts.
-
-This bird gets his name of cedar-bird from the fact that he is fond of
-cedar berries. He is often called cherry-bird also, because he likes
-cherries. His name waxwing comes from the little tips like red
-sealing-wax which are on some of his wing feathers. In Maine he is
-called the bonnet-bird because of his crest, and in some places he is
-called silk-tail from his silky plumage. You see he has plenty of names.
-
-Among the strange things about him is that he has almost no voice. The
-loudest sound he is known to make is a sort of whistle, so low it is
-like a whisper.
-
-The cedar-bird builds a very neat nest in a tree, and feeds his mate
-while she is sitting, as well as helps her feed the little folk. The
-young cedar-bird is a winsome youngster, gentle in his ways, and pretty
-in his soft gray suit and spotted breast.
-
-One day last summer, a man walking down a quiet road was surprised by a
-young bird alighting on his shoulder. He walked on home with it, and
-when he took it off found it was a baby cedar-bird. No doubt he had
-tried to fly too far and got tired.
-
-The family kept the bird a day or two, and then brought him to me. He
-was not afraid of anybody, and was perfectly happy so long as some one
-would keep him warm between two hands.
-
-It was hard to get him to eat, and there were plenty of his grown-up
-relatives about, probably his own family among them. So I thought it
-would be safe to put him out. I took him to the woods where I had seen a
-little family of young cedar-birds, and placed him on a low tree. He
-brightened up at once, and began to call, and flew to another tree.
-Fearing that my being there might prevent his mother coming to him, I
-left him. When I went out again I could not find him, so I hope he was
-safe with his friends.
-
-I was more certain of it, because I know that these birds are kind to
-all birds in distress. A lady was once watching a nest of robins when
-the parents disappeared, no doubt killed. She was much troubled to know
-how she should get at the high nest to feed the young ones who were
-calling for their dinner, when she saw a cedar-bird go to them and feed
-them.
-
-After that she kept close watch, and saw the cedar-bird feed them every
-day, and take care of the nestlings till they could fly. He no doubt
-taught them to take care of themselves, but this she could not see, for
-they flew away.
-
-The ordinary food of this bird is insects that are found on trees,
-especially among fruit. But they have taken to fly-catching also. A
-party of them may often be seen busily at work catching flies. This is a
-very good thing for them as well as for us. The birds or beasts who can
-eat only one sort of food are called "single-food" animals, and they
-are growing scarcer every day. They need a change of diet to flourish.
-We should be sorry to have cedar-birds become scarce.
-
-Cedar-birds are fond of cherries,--as I said,--but they eat hundreds of
-cankerworms to one cherry. So they earn all they have. Besides, if they
-can get wild cherries, they prefer them. They have been proved to be
-among our most useful birds. In one hundred and fifty-two stomachs that
-were examined, only nine had cultivated cherries.
-
-Cedar-birds eat caterpillars and grubs, and are very fond of the
-elm-leaf beetle. They have been known to clear the elm-trees of a whole
-town, where the trees had been stripped for several years before they
-came. Besides insects, they eat the berries of many wild bushes and
-trees, such as wild cherry, dogwood, June-berry, elder, and others. They
-always prefer wild to cultivated berries.
-
-One spring I saw a little flock of cedar-birds in an orchard full of
-blossoming apple-trees. They spent nearly all their time going over the
-trees, and working among the blossoms. One who was careless about it
-might have thought they were destroying apple buds, for they did eat
-many of the white petals of the flowers. But I wanted to be sure, so I
-watched carefully with my glass. Then I stayed by that orchard till
-October, and I never saw trees so loaded with apples as they were. Many
-branches lay on the ground with their weight of fruit, and in the whole
-orchard there was but one insect nest. That showed not only that the
-cedar-birds had done no harm, but that probably they had destroyed
-thousands of insects that would have done harm.
-
-
-A bird classed with the waxwings is a California bird, the PHAINOPEPLA,
-or SHINING CRESTED FLYCATCHER. He is glossy bluish black in color, with
-large white spots in the wings, which show only when flying. His mate is
-brownish gray. They are rather slim birds, nearly as big as a catbird.
-
-The phainopepla is a beautiful fellow, with an elegant pointed crest,
-and plumage shining like satin. He sits up very straight on his perch,
-but he is a rather shy bird, and so not much is known about his ways. He
-is a real mountain lover, living on mountains, or in cañons, or the
-borders of small streams of California, Arizona, and Texas.
-
-As you see by one of his names, he is a flycatcher. Sometimes thirty or
-forty of them may be seen in a flock, all engaged in catching flies.
-But like the cedar-bird, he is also fond of berries. When berries are
-ripe on the pepper-trees, he comes nearer to houses to feast on the
-beautiful red clusters.
-
-The song of this bird is said to be fine, and like many other birds, he
-sometimes utters a sweet whisper song.
-
-The nest is placed on a branch, not very high up in a tree, and is
-often, perhaps always, made of flower stems with the flowers on, with
-fine strips of bark, grasses, and plant down.
-
-What is curious, and rare among birds, the male phainopepla insists on
-making the nest himself. He generally allows his mate to come and look
-on, and greets her with joyous song, but he will not let her touch it
-till all is done. Sometimes he even drives her away. When all is ready
-for sitting, he lets her take her share of the work, but even then he
-appears to sit as much as she. Miss Merriam found a party of these birds
-on some pepper-trees, and to her we owe most of what we know of their
-habits.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[12] See Appendix, 11.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-THE SWALLOW FAMILY
-
-(_Hirundinidæ_)[13]
-
-
-IT is very easy to know this family. They are small birds with long
-pointed wings, always sailing around in the air as if they could never
-tire. Their beaks are short, but very wide at the head, and the mouth
-opens as far back as the eyes. They have small and weak feet, so when
-they alight, it is usually on a small twig or telegraph wire, or on the
-flat top of a fence or roof.
-
-Swallows wear no gay colors. Nearly all of them look black and white as
-they sail about in the air. But when you see them closely, you see they
-are glossy dark blue or green, sometimes with changeable colors, but all
-dark, on the back.
-
-
-The BARN SWALLOW has a dull reddish breast, and his back is rich blue,
-almost black. He has a deeply forked tail, and a row of white spots on
-the shorter tail feathers. When he spreads his tail, it is very
-beautiful.
-
-He is called barn swallow because he prefers a barn for a nesting-place.
-Up on the beams, close under the roof, the pair build their mud cradle.
-It is interesting to see them at work. When they have chosen a place,
-they go to some puddle in the road. They stand around it on their tiny
-feet, holding their wings straight up like a butterfly's. Then they take
-up some of the wet earth in their beaks, and work it around till it is
-made into a little pill. With this pill they fly to the place they have
-selected, and stick it on to the beam. Then they go back for more. So
-they go on, till they have built up the walls of the nest, an inch
-thick, and three or four inches high. Sometimes they put layers of fine
-grass in, but often they use nothing but mud. Then they line it with
-feathers which they pick up in the chicken yard.
-
-Some swallows build a platform beside the nest, where one of the pair
-can rest at night; and when the little ones get big enough to fill up
-the nest, both parents can sleep there.
-
-When the swallows are flying about low over the grass, looking as if
-they were at play, they are really catching tiny insects as they go. And
-when they have nestlings to feed, they collect a mouthful which they
-make up into a sort of little ball. Then they fly to the nest and feed
-it to one of the little ones.
-
-Thus they keep the air clear and free from insects, and they do not a
-bit of harm, for they never touch our fruit or vegetables.
-
-Barn swallows are social, and always go in flocks. They sing, too,--a
-sweet little song, but not very loud. It is charming to hear them in a
-barn when five or six of them sing together. But one may often hear the
-little song from a single bird flying over.
-
-They are friendly among themselves, and they like to alight on a roof
-and chatter away a long time. In one place where I was staying, they
-liked to gather on a piazza roof right under my window. They often woke
-me in the morning with their sweet little voices.
-
-One morning the sound was so near, it seemed as if they must be in the
-room, and I opened my eyes to see. There on the sill close to the screen
-was one of the pretty fellows. He was looking in at the open window, and
-evidently keeping watch of me. When I moved a little, he gave the alarm,
-and the whole party flew away.
-
-The chatter of barn swallows always seems to me like talk, and men who
-study bird ways agree that birds have some sort of language. The
-swallows have many different notes. One is a general warning of danger,
-but there is another note for a man, another for a cat, and a still
-different one when they find something good to eat, which they call the
-others to share.
-
-"The variety of bird speech," says a man who has studied birds a long
-time, "is very great." And of all bird voices, swallows' are the most
-like human speech. If you lie on the hay in the barn very quiet, and
-listen to them when they come in and fly about, you will see that this
-is true. It seems sometimes as if you could almost make out words.
-
-
-Swallows more than any other birds like to make use of our buildings for
-their own homes. Barn swallows take the beams inside the barns, EAVE
-SWALLOWS settle under the eaves outside, and PURPLE MARTINS, the largest
-of the family, choose bird-houses which we put up for them.
-
-It is said that purple martins will not stay anywhere that men have not
-made houses for them. But I have seen them living in a place not put up
-for them, though perhaps they thought it was. It was under a terra-cotta
-covering to a cornice on a business block in the middle of a busy city.
-The terra-cotta was shaped like a large pipe cut in half, the long way.
-This half cylinder was laid on top of the brick cornice, and that made a
-little roof, you see. The whole length of that cornice was thus made
-into one long room, with a brick floor and terra-cotta roof, and an
-entrance at the end. That room must have had a dozen martin nests, for a
-flock was all the time sailing about in the air, above the roofs of the
-houses.
-
-As these birds eat only flying insects, they cannot stay with us when it
-is too cool for insects to fly abroad. So they leave us very early. When
-the little ones are out of the nest and can fly well, swallows from all
-the country around collect in great flocks, and go to some swamp, or
-lonely place where people do not go much. There the young ones are
-taught and exercised every day in flying. And some day we shall go out
-and find them all gone, not a swallow to be seen. They have started for
-their winter home, which is far south, in tropical countries, where
-insects never fail; but it is a comfort to think that next summer we
-shall have them back with us again.
-
-The swallows I have mentioned, barn swallow, eave swallow, and purple
-martin, are found all over our country.
-
-Let me tell you a story that shows the purple martin has a good deal of
-sense. One of these birds built in a box under a window, fixed so that
-the owner could open it and take out eggs. He took out several, one at a
-time, and at last he took out one of the birds.
-
-The mate of the stolen bird went off and in a few days came back with
-another mate. The box was too good to give up, so both the birds went to
-work to make it safe against the nest robber. They built up a wall of
-mud before the too handy back door. The egg thief could not get in
-without breaking down the wall, and he was ashamed to do that. So the
-birds kept their pleasant home, and reared their family there.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[13] See Appendix, 12.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-THE TANAGER FAMILY
-
-(_Tanagridæ_)[14]
-
-
-THIS is a large family of between three and four hundred species, all
-dressed in gay colors. But we have only three of them in our country.
-Their home is in the warmer parts of the world. We have the scarlet
-tanager in the East, the Louisiana tanager in the West, and the summer
-tanager in the South. Tanagers are a little larger than sparrows, and
-live in the trees. They feed on insects and fruit; sometimes, it is
-said, on flowers.
-
-
-The SCARLET TANAGER is the brilliant red bird with black wings and tail,
-common all over the Eastern and Middle States. His mate is dressed in
-modest olive green, and the nestlings are like her the first year.
-
-The tanager himself wears his gay dress only during the nesting season,
-that is, spring and summer. Towards fall he turns from scarlet to green
-like his mate, and he is a droll-looking object while he does it. He
-seems to break out into green patches or streaks. One that I watched
-began by showing a little green feather among the red on each side of
-his breast. I have seen one with a green ring around the neck, and all
-the rest of the plumage scarlet; and another with a green stripe down
-the back. Some show no regularity about it, but are covered with green
-patches all over, and look like bunches of colored rags.
-
-[Illustration: SCARLET TANAGER]
-
-It is no wonder that a bird hides in the woods, as many do, when
-changing his coat, if he looks such an object. In spring he gets back
-his brilliant coat, and comes to our Northern woods again, to nest.
-
-The nest of this bird is not very high in a tree. It is a rather shabby
-affair, that looks as if it would fall to pieces, and the birds are
-madly shy about being looked at.
-
-I once saw in the woods a tanager building her nest. I hoped to watch
-her through nesting, and see how she brought up her little folk. Both of
-the pair were there, but were too shy to come to the nest while my
-friend and I were there. We kept very still, and even hid in some
-bushes, hoping she would not see us. We were so quiet that she was
-gradually getting over her fright, and coming nearer the nest, when
-suddenly the big dog we had with us gave a loud sneeze. In an instant
-both birds were off, as if shot out of a gun. And I think they never
-came back, for the nest was not finished.
-
-The song of the tanager is much like the robin song, but having once
-learned it, a sharp ear can easily tell them apart, for it is of a
-different tone. It is rather hoarse, not so smooth as a robin's voice.
-The common call is a hoarse and very distinct "chip, chur," given by
-both of the pair.
-
-Several years ago I saw a scarlet tanager in a bird store. It was
-winter, and I brought him home to keep till it was safe to set him free
-in the spring. He was very timid, and did not like to have any one look
-at him, especially when he went to eat.
-
-If I happened to look at him when he was at his food-dish, he would
-instantly fly to his top perch, and look as if he would never eat again.
-So I partitioned off one corner of his cage for a private dining-room,
-by a strip of stiff paper woven between the wires. After that it was
-very droll to see him retire behind the screen and eat, now and then
-sticking up his head to glance over the top, and see if I were looking.
-
-I found it hard to please him with food. He liked living insects, but he
-wanted to catch them for himself. So I got some sticky fly-paper, and
-hung it up outside the kitchen door. When I had caught half a dozen
-flies, I took it up to him. He was not in a cage, and the minute he saw
-the flies he flew across the room and hovered before me like a big
-hummingbird, while he daintily picked off every fly. He forgot that he
-didn't like to have me see him eat. After that I was fly-catcher every
-day till he learned to like mockingbird food.
-
-In the spring he began to sing--a sweet, low song, different from the
-common tanager song. Then I took him out to the country, away from the
-English sparrows, and set him free.
-
-
-The SUMMER TANAGER nests in the Southern States from New Jersey to
-Florida. He is all red, but otherwise looks like the scarlet tanager,
-and his habits are about the same.
-
-
-The LOUISIANA TANAGER nests in the Western States from the Plains to the
-Pacific. He is brighter, with a variety of colors. He is mostly bright
-yellow, with brilliant red head, and black wings and tail, and his
-mate--like other female tanagers--is in olive green. He is a shy bird,
-and lives in the woods, and his habits have been very little studied.
-
-I once saw a pair of these birds in Utah, getting their breakfast. At
-least, the gay singer himself was at that business, though his
-sharp-eyed mate was too busy watching me to see that I did not mean any
-harm, to care for food.
-
-They were on a long fence, catching flies. One would fly out a little
-way, his bill snapping as he seized the fly, and then return to the
-fence a little farther off. Every time he came back he alighted farther
-away, though he did not seem even to see me. His mate kept between him
-and me, and never took her eyes from me. I feared she would go hungry,
-so I came away and left them.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[14] See Appendix, 13.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-THE SPARROW AND FINCH FAMILY
-
-(_Fringillidæ_)[15]
-
-
-THIS is the largest bird family, more than five hundred species, and
-they are found nearly all over the world. It is divided into sparrows,
-finches, grosbeaks, and crossbills. All of them are smaller than a
-robin, and have short, high beaks, with the back corners turned down.
-The beaks show that they are seed eaters, though all of them eat insects
-too.
-
-An interesting thing about birds who eat seeds is the grinding machine
-they have inside to break up the hard seeds. For of course, having no
-teeth, they are obliged to swallow them nearly whole. What I have called
-a machine is the gizzard, and you have seen it on the table from a
-chicken. It is well fitted to grind up the food, and birds often swallow
-small stones to help in the work.
-
-The first group of this family, the sparrows, are all small, about the
-size of an English sparrow. They are dressed in dull, brownish colors,
-more or less streaked, and they live and get their food very largely on
-or near the ground. Their colors keep them from being easily seen on the
-ground.
-
-All of this group sing, and some of them are noted songsters, as the
-song sparrow, the white-throated sparrow, and the fox sparrow. The best
-known is the little song sparrow, who is found almost everywhere, and is
-dear to nearly every one.
-
-
-The SONG SPARROW is streaked all over in shades of brown. The breast is
-white, with the dark brown streaks coming together in an
-irregular-shaped spot, or sometimes two spots, in front.
-
-The nest of the song sparrow is on the ground or very near it. Sometimes
-it is in a tuft of grass, sometimes in a low bush a few inches up. One I
-found at the roots of a little clump of golden-rod, before it bloomed,
-of course. It was a slight affair, right among the stems, so that it
-could not be taken up without tearing the plant.
-
-This bird is one of the first to come in the spring, and his song and
-the robin's are the first we hear. He also stays very late in the fall,
-and about New York some of them stay all winter. Their food being the
-seeds of weeds, which are always to be found, they do not need to
-migrate.
-
-The song sparrow has a sweet and cheery voice, and a variety of songs,
-and he sings a great deal. I have heard one bird sing six different
-songs, standing on a fence in plain sight all the time. Some of the
-songs are charming, and all are pleasant to hear. One never tires of
-song-sparrow music.
-
-
-The second branch of this family--the Finches--have some brighter
-colored members, the goldfinch in brilliant lemon-yellow, and the purple
-finch in crimson and white.
-
-The GOLDFINCH, called also the thistle-bird, lettuce-bird, and wild
-canary, is a charming fellow, dressed, as I said, in lemon color, with
-black wings and tail and cap. His mate is in olive brown. He is the most
-delightful of singers, with a sweet voice, and is a common bird all over
-the country. He flies in great waves, uttering a cheery little warble as
-he goes over each airy wave.
-
-The nest is one of the prettiest we have, in an upright crotch, and
-furnished with a bed of thistledown an inch thick for the baby
-goldfinches to rest upon. It is made late in the season, in July and
-sometimes in August.
-
-One of the most lovely bird-studies I ever had was of a pair of these
-birds nesting in a low plum-tree. While his mate was sitting, the gay
-little fellow hung around, doing nothing but watching the tree that held
-his family. Every little while the sitting bird would begin to call her
-sweet-voiced "s-w-e-e-t," which sounds so much like a canary's call. On
-hearing this he would answer her, and at once fly over to see if she was
-all right, or wanted anything. When he thought it time to eat, he would
-come and call her off. Both would then go to a patch of weeds, where
-they cracked and ate the seeds till they had had enough, and then go
-back to the nursery.
-
-These little birds eat mostly the seeds of weeds,--thistle, ragweed, and
-beggar's-ticks,--as well as the larvæ of the wheat-midge and other
-pests, and they feed great quantities to their young.
-
-Goldfinches do not leave us in winter. The male puts off his bright coat
-and comes out in dull colors like his mate, except that he keeps his
-black wings and tail. All of a neighborhood collect in small flocks and
-stay about all winter, looking more like sparrows than goldfinches.
-
-The Western goldfinch which corresponds to this bird is called in
-California the WILLOW GOLDFINCH, but in looks and in habits of life he
-seems to be the same as the Eastern bird. He is a confiding little
-creature, and by a person of quiet ways may be made very tame.
-
-
-Among the finches will be found the CHEWINK, or TOWHEE BUNTING, a bird
-nearly of the size of a catbird, who is sometimes called ground robin.
-He is black and white, with reddish sides and red eyes, and his mate is
-brown where he is black. He is usually found on the ground, where he
-gets his food, and where the nest is placed.
-
-There are several species in California, and the Western variety of the
-common chewink of the East is called the spurred towhee, with habits the
-same, so far as known.
-
-The chewink has at the best an exquisite song, though there is a great
-difference in singers, as there is in all bird families. The finest song
-is like a peal of silver-toned bells.
-
-A bird-lover whom I know found one day a nestling chewink who could not
-fly much, and seemed to be deserted, or lost, in a barren place on Long
-Island. Fearing that some cat would get him, he brought the bird home
-and put him in a cage. The little fellow was not at all frightened at
-his new surroundings, and became very tame.
-
-The cage of the young bird was near that of an ortolan, a European bird
-noted as a singer, and a common cage-bird. The baby chewink seemed to
-take a great liking to the stranger, and tried to do everything he did.
-Perhaps he felt the need of some education, since he had been deprived
-of his parents. At any rate, he evidently adopted the ortolan as his
-model.
-
-When the little one began to sing, he did not sing chewink but ortolan,
-and he did it so well that one could hardly tell which bird was singing.
-The gentleman wanted to see if the little fellow would recognize the
-song of his own family. So he bought a full-grown chewink who was
-singing, and put him close to his young relative. The new bird was full
-of music, and sang a great deal. But the youngster paid no attention to
-him, and kept up his ortolan notes.
-
-This story shows that a bird does not always, if ever, know his native
-song by instinct, but has to learn it. It is supposed by those who have
-studied bird ways that he learns it from the old bird before he leaves
-the nest.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[15] See Appendix, 14.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-THE GROSBEAK BRANCH
-
-(_Fringillidæ_)--Continued
-
-
-THE third division of this family is of grosbeaks. These are the largest
-of the group, and nearly the size of a robin, with very big beaks. They
-live in trees and wear some bright colors. They are also fine singers.
-
-
-In the Eastern States, and west to Missouri, is found the ROSE-BREASTED
-GROSBEAK. He is a beautiful bird, black and white, with a gorgeous
-rose-colored patch on his white breast, and the same color on the inside
-of his wings. You can see him in the picture. His mate is modest in
-stripes of brown and buffy white.
-
-[Illustration: ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK]
-
-A lady whom I know in New England has had three of these birds living
-tame in her house, hardly at all confined to a cage. Each one was picked
-up when just out of the nest and so injured that it could not care for
-itself. It was carefully fed and reared in the house, and thus saved
-from death.
-
-One of the three was a female, who was as tame as a domestic cat, and
-lived in the house four or five years. She was a fine singer, though
-never a loud one. She kept the family cats in their place by pecking at
-their toes when they came near, so they had respect for her.
-
-Another was a young singer who had his bill crossed, so that he could
-not feed himself. He was nearly dead for want of food when he was found.
-She fed him carefully and brought him up, though she had always to feed
-him herself. That is a good deal to do, for birds want to be fed very
-often.
-
-These birds who lived in a house, and were not taught by their parents,
-never gave the common song of the species, but made up songs of their
-own. They lived several years with their friend, who was very fond of
-them.
-
-The rose-breasted grosbeak is one who puts on his gay colors only for
-the nesting season. When that is over, and he moults, and gets his new
-winter suit, it is mostly streaked brown like his mate's. The rosy patch
-is very small, and mixed with brown, so the effect is dull. In the
-spring he moults the body feathers, and comes out again with his
-brilliant rose colors.
-
-
-The bird who takes the place of the rosebreast in the West is the
-BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK. He is reddish brown and black, with the same
-color and lemon yellow on the under parts, and yellow under the wings,
-instead of rose like the Eastern bird. He is a loud, enthusiastic
-singer. Miss Merriam says of him that his song to his mate is finer than
-that of any other bird she has heard.
-
-
-The CARDINAL GROSBEAK, cardinal redbird, Virginia nightingale, or
-redbird, as he is called in different places, is of the third group of
-this family. He is found all over the Southern States, and as far north
-as Southern New England and New York. He is a brilliant red to the tip
-of his beak, with a beautiful crest and black throat and face. His mate
-is in soft dove colors, with red beak, and reddish tints on her quiet
-robe.
-
-Both of the pair are singers. He is much the louder, but she has the
-sweeter song. He is famous as a singer, and is therefore trapped and
-caught in great numbers for cages. In Europe, where he is a favorite
-cage-bird, he is thought by many to be equal to the famous nightingale
-as a singer.
-
-In Ohio, a few years ago, a law was made that no cardinal should be
-caged, and those in cages should be set free. In one small village were
-more than forty freed. This shows how many are caged.
-
-While nesting, the cardinal is rather savage, ready to fight any one who
-disturbs the nest. If a snake comes about, all the birds within hearing,
-from cardinals to kinglets, will come to help defend the nest and punish
-the enemy. They fly at him with loud cries, and even attack him if he
-does not leave.
-
-The nest of these birds is not very high, in a tree or bush, and they
-are very shy about it. A cardinal will desert her nest if it is touched,
-especially if eggs are not yet laid. But they have reason to be afraid;
-they cannot be blamed for that.
-
-I saw a nest built on a trellis beside a kitchen door, and the birds
-were so used to the people that they were not afraid. One who lived in
-that house was a boy fourteen years old. But he was so gentle with birds
-that they did not fear him at all. They would feed the nestlings freely,
-while he stood not three feet from them. So they can be made tame, if
-people will be gentle and not disturb them.
-
-The cardinal grosbeak stays as far north as New Jersey and Ohio all
-winter, and a little flock have lived in Central Park, New York, for
-several years. That is most delightful for those who live near, for
-they sing all winter, when few bird-notes are to be heard. They can stay
-because they are seed eaters, and they find many weed seeds, and wild
-berries like cedar berries, that stay on all winter.
-
-[Illustration: CARDINAL]
-
-A lady once had a cardinal in a cage with a pair of the tiny green
-parrots called love-birds. These little birds, you know, are always
-putting the bills together and caressing each other, as if kissing. The
-cardinal seemed to think this very silly; at any rate, he did not like
-it. After looking on awhile, he would lose patience and dash right down
-between them. Of course this drove them apart. Then he seemed to feel
-better, and went back to his perch. But when they began it again, down
-he would come between them again. He did not disturb them at any other
-time, but that sort of thing he plainly couldn't endure.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-THE CROSSBILL BRANCH
-
-(_Fringillidæ_)--Continued
-
-
-THE fourth branch of this family is of crossbills. Of these we have two.
-They are smaller than grosbeaks, and, as their name shows, have the two
-points of the bill crossed. It looks as if they could not feed
-themselves. But a beak like this is just fitted to pick seeds out of
-cones. And crossbills live mostly on cone-seeds.
-
-These queer beaks are used for another thing, too. They help the birds
-climb around on the trees. They are almost as good as a hand. You have
-seen a parrot use his beak in the same way.
-
-
-The AMERICAN, or RED, CROSSBILL is the more common of our two. He
-travels about all over the Northern States and California. But he's very
-particular about a place to nest, and is suited only in the northern
-parts, or in the mountains.
-
-The red crossbill seems to be a whimsical fellow; one never knows where
-to find him. One year he will come with all his friends to a place, and
-the next year there will not be one there.
-
-The male is dull red, more or less streaked all over with brown. His
-mate is olive green, mottled and mixed with blackish.
-
-Crossbills go in flocks. They are usually seen among the evergreens,
-where they find their food. They are much attached to one another.
-
-I had a chance one summer to get well acquainted with a flock of
-American crossbills. I found them very odd in their manners. They had
-the queerest songs and calls of any bird I know. These were not musical,
-but sounded like such things as the squeaking of a wagon wheel or the
-sawing of wood.
-
-The birds were very fond of calling and singing, and they kept up a
-constant chattering, as they flew from spruce to spruce. They spent most
-of their time on these trees, eating the seeds of the cones.
-
-The white-winged crossbill lives about as the red one does. But he has a
-really fine song. It is full of trills, something like a canary's song.
-
-One of the odd things about these birds is their habit of nesting in
-winter. A Maine hunter was once shooting moose in the middle of January,
-when he came upon the nest of a crossbill, with the bird sitting. The
-weather was cold, of course, and there was deep snow on the ground. The
-nest was in the woods, and made of twigs, with long gray moss outside.
-It looked so like a bunch of moss that it was hard to see. Other nests
-have been found in winter also.
-
-Mr. Nehrling says that if one of these birds is caught, the rest of the
-flock will not leave him. They stay around him, crying and showing their
-distress in every way, and if one is put alone into a cage, he will
-die.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-THE BLACKBIRD FAMILY
-
-(_Icteridæ_)[16]
-
-
-THERE are more than one hundred species of the Blackbird Family in
-America. So we will divide them into four branches: Marsh Blackbirds,
-Meadow Starlings, Orioles, and Crow Blackbirds.
-
-[Illustration: RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD]
-
-Blackbirds are walkers. They dress mostly in black, and they are of
-medium size. Some of them will generally be found on the ground in a
-marsh or a meadow. They are social birds, that is, they go in flocks.
-Fond as they are of society, however, there is one time when they are
-willing to be a little apart from the blackbird world. That is when they
-are nesting and rearing a young family. Two interesting birds of this
-family are the red-winged blackbird and the cow-blackbird or cowbird.
-
-
-The RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD is found all over the country. He is not so
-large as a robin, and is black all over, excepting one place on the
-wings. On these are bright stripes of red and orange, which seem to be
-on the shoulders when the wings are closed. They make the bird very gay,
-when he spreads them out in flying.
-
-The red-wing's mate is a modest-looking bird in stripes of brown and
-black. She is a plodding sort of a creature, too. She walks about on the
-ground, looking for grubs or insects so busily that she hardly seems to
-see anything else.
-
-The nest is usually in a marsh. At any rate, it must be near the water,
-for red-wings are as fond of the water as any old sailor. It is hung
-between reeds, or in the branches of a low bush. It is a comfortable,
-bag-like affair, deep enough and big enough to hold the restless
-blackbird babies.
-
-While the mother red-wing is sitting, her mate stays near her and sings
-a great deal. His song is a loud, sweet "hwa-ker-ee," which may be heard
-a long way off. When nestlings are out, he is one of the most busy and
-fussy of birds. He helps in the feeding, and seems to be a good and
-careful father. But when the young ones are grown up and able to feed
-themselves, a curious thing happens. All the gay red-wings in a
-neighborhood come together in a flock again. And all the young ones and
-the mothers stay in another flock.
-
-The red-wing is a very nervous and uneasy fellow. While his mate is
-sitting he is always on guard to see that no harm comes to her. In the
-picture you can see he looks much concerned, as if he had discovered
-something. Then he makes a great row if any one comes near. He will give
-such cries of distress that one would think he was hurt, or that his
-nestlings were being stolen away. If the enemy is a crow, come to feed
-quietly on the meadow, he will fly at him, try to peck his head, and
-annoy him till he goes away. If it is a person who alarms him, he will
-circle about over his head with loud cries, and now and then swoop down
-as if he meant to attack him. In fact, he shows so much distress that it
-is not very pleasant to stay near him.
-
-The young red-wing is just as uneasy and fussy as his papa. As soon as
-he is able to get out of the nest, he scrambles about in the bushes. He
-never stays two minutes in one place, and every time his mother comes
-with food she has to hunt him up before she can give it to him.
-
-The red-wing is fond of green corn, and is often shot by farmers, but he
-is also a famous insect eater, and earns all the corn he gets. He eats
-numbers of cut-worms, and other insects, and in some of the prairie
-States he does great good by eating locusts and their eggs. Besides
-these, he likes variety, and is fond of the seeds of weeds. Ragweed and
-smartweed seeds are dainties to him as some nuts are to you, and he eats
-a great many. So unless a large flock comes to one place to disturb the
-crops, you may be sure they do more good than harm. So says the
-Department I told you about.
-
-The young red-winged blackbird is a droll fellow, and has decided
-notions of his own. Mr. Keyser tells a story of one he picked up. He was
-put in with some other young birds,--meadowlarks and catbirds. They were
-all babies together, and all used to being fed. So when the little
-red-wing got something to eat, they would open their mouths and beg for
-it, in the pretty bird-baby way. At first he fed them, though he wasn't
-much more than a baby himself; but they liked it so well that they
-coaxed everything away from him. He soon got tired of that, and at last
-refused to feed them at all.
-
-This little bird liked to play jokes on the sober young meadowlarks. His
-way was to seize one by the wing or tail and dance around the floor,
-dragging his victim after him. The young larks scolded and held back,
-and at last they learned to stop his pranks. They did it by throwing
-themselves over on their backs, and holding up their claws ready to
-fight.
-
-In spite of this naughty fun, the young blackbird was really fond of
-them. The larks slept on the ground, and at night, when the little
-fellows settled down on the floor, the red-wing would often leave his
-perch and cuddle down by them. This must have been for company only, for
-it was his way to sleep on a perch.
-
-
-The COW-BLACKBIRD, or COWBIRD, is another one of this branch of the
-Blackbird Family who is found all over the United States. He is shining
-blue-black all over, except his head, which is brown. His mate is
-entirely brown. He is not quite so large as a red-wing, and he too is a
-walker.
-
-This bird is called cowbird because he is fond of flying about the
-cows,--not to trouble them, but to eat the insects that torment
-them,--which is very pleasant for the cows, I am sure.
-
-There is one queer way that cowbirds have, which no one is able to
-explain. The cowbird mother does not build a nest for her little family.
-Yet she wants them well cared for. So she goes slyly about and lays her
-eggs in other birds' nests. She generally chooses the nest of a smaller
-bird, though she often uses one belonging to a wood thrush.
-
-Most little birds--warblers and finches--accept the charge. They hatch
-out the strange egg and bring up the young cowbird, who is bigger than
-themselves. He is so big that he usually smothers the young ones that
-belong in the nest. So he receives the whole attention of the little
-mother bird.
-
-Sometimes other birds come to help one who has a young cowbird to feed,
-and he grows big and strong. When he is full grown he joins a party of
-other cowbirds, and they go off in a flock by themselves.
-
-Some small birds will not submit to this. When they find a cowbird's egg
-in their nest, they go away and leave it there, and make a new nest. Or
-they make a new story, as I told you the yellow warbler does.
-
-The cowbird has a queer little song. It is something like "cluck-see!"
-and he seems to squeeze it out as if it were hard work to say it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[16] See Appendix, 15.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-THE MEADOW STARLINGS
-
-(_Icteridæ_)--Continued
-
-
-THE meadow starlings are short-tailed birds who live on the ground. They
-have long bills and mixed sort of plumage, of browns and yellows.
-
-[Illustration: MEADOWLARK]
-
-Our common one, called the MEADOWLARK or OLD-FIELD LARK, though he is
-not really a lark, is a beautiful bird. He is larger than a robin, and
-his mottled feathers are set off by a bright yellow breast, with a black
-crescent under the throat.
-
-This bird lives in the meadows or pastures, and walks about on the
-ground, where he gets his food. When he wants to sing, he flies up on to
-a fence, or stands up very straight on a bit of turf, or a stone, and
-sings away a long time. It is a sweet song, or rather several sweet
-songs, for he does not always sing the same one.
-
-The mother lark looks like her mate. She makes her nest on the ground,
-and a snug and cozy home it is. It is none of the open, cup-like
-nests that anybody can see into. It has a roof, if you please, and
-sometimes a covered way--like a hall--leading to it. The roof of the
-nest is made by drawing the grass stems over it and weaving them
-together. So it is very hard to find. And it is hidden in the long
-meadow grass besides.
-
-You might think the little family would get hurt when the haymakers came
-to cut the grass. So they would, if they happened to be there. But lark
-babies are out of the egg before that time, and they run about as soon
-as they can stand. Sometimes when a nest has been disturbed, and the
-birds have had to make a second one, the little ones are not out when
-the mowers come on. Then there are apt to be sad times in the family.
-But I have known mowers who carefully cut around a nest, and did not
-hurt the nestlings. That is a good thing to do, for the birds are so
-useful and such fine singers that we want as many as we can have.
-
-The meadowlark is a shy bird, and so is more often heard than seen. His
-song is charming, and he has besides a strange call, a sort of harsh
-sputter, or chatter, sometimes as he flies over. No doubt he has many
-more ways of expressing himself, but these are the ones we most often
-hear.
-
-
-The WESTERN MEADOWLARK looks like the Eastern, except that he is a
-little paler and grayer in color. He has the same general habits, but he
-is a much finer singer. The song is wilder and has more variety, and
-sometimes it is very brilliant. It is different in every way from the
-quiet, rather sad notes that make the Eastern bird so winning.
-
-The Western bird is not so timid as his Eastern brother. He often comes
-into the towns and sings from the tops of houses. The finest singer I
-ever heard sang every day from the peak of a low roof. His song to his
-mate is most charming. It is so low and tender one can hardly hear it.
-
-I once saw a pair of the Western birds nest-making. The little builder
-was busy filling her beak with dried grasses and such things. For these
-she had to fly across the road where I sat. Her mate went with her every
-time. He perched on the fence while she gathered her beakful, watching
-that no harm came to her. When she went back, he flew across with her
-and perched on a tree on that side.
-
-All the time he was singing the sweetest low warble, and all the time he
-was keeping a sharp watch on me. In the West this bird eats beetles,
-grasshoppers, and the disgusting big black crickets that do so much
-damage.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-THE ORIOLE BRANCH
-
-(_Icteridæ_)--Continued
-
-
-IT seems odd to put the gay orioles into the Blackbird Family,
-especially as they don't live on the ground either; but that's where
-they belong in the books. Orioles live in the trees, and are fine
-singers. They have sharp-pointed bills, suitable for picking tiny
-insects out of fruit blossoms. They have some of the family color,
-black, but more orange color, or chestnut red, or yellow. They all make
-beautiful nests.
-
-The Baltimore oriole is all over the East, the orchard oriole in the
-South, and the Arizona hooded oriole in the West.
-
-
-The BALTIMORE ORIOLE, who has several other names, such as fire-bird,
-golden robin, and hang-nest, is a very showy bird, in bright orange and
-black. He has a fine though short song. His mate is yellow, and brown
-instead of black, and has a sweet song of her own. Both of them can
-scold as well as any birds I know.
-
-The nest of this oriole is one of the prettiest we have. It is hung high
-up in a tall tree, an elm or willow usually, and near the end of a
-branch, where it swings in the wind. It is a deep bag made of plant
-fibres, bits of string, and other things. The whole has a gray tint and
-a silky look, which make it very attractive.
-
-While the mother bird is sitting, her mate stays near and sings a good
-deal; but when feeding time comes, he works as hard as she in stuffing
-the hungry little mouths.
-
-As soon as the nestlings are off, they go away in a little party. Then
-one who looks sharp may often see an oriole papa going quietly about on
-the ground, with two or three little ones after him, still calling to be
-fed. He doesn't sing any in these busy days. But sometimes, after the
-young have learned to feed themselves, he will sing again a little
-before they all start for their warm winter home in Central America.
-
-It is an anxious time in the bird world when the young are leaving the
-nest. Orioles are so nervous and make such an outcry over their troubles
-that we often hear them. The most common accident is the falling of a
-nestling to the ground. The old birds make so much fuss over it that one
-would think the baby had fallen into the claws of the cat, at the very
-least.
-
-They fly around as if they were crazy, shrieking and calling, for they
-are very fond of their little folk. The youngsters are plucky little
-fellows. One will hop along till he comes to a tree, and then try to
-climb the trunk. If he happens to hit on a tree with rough bark, he can
-do pretty well. He flutters a little way up, and then holds on by the
-claws till rested. Then he flies a little farther, and so he goes till
-he reaches a branch.
-
-If it is a smooth trunk he tries, his troubles are great. Sometimes one
-will scramble up till he comes to a leaf that grows out from the trunk,
-and hang on to that till he is able to go on. But often one is unable to
-keep his hold, and falls back into the grass. I have several times
-picked up a hot and frightened birdling and put him on a branch.
-
-A lady told me an interesting little story, showing how helpful birds
-are to one another. A Baltimore oriole was picked up from the ground
-with his wing broken so that he could not fly. The kind-hearted people
-fixed him comfortably in an attic. They intended to feed him and care
-for him till he got well and could fly.
-
-They left him there with a window open, so that his wild friends could
-bring food if they wished. A little while afterward one of them went up
-to see about the invalid. Behold, he was gone!
-
-They looked for him everywhere, for they knew he could not fly. Suddenly
-they noticed a great deal of oriole chatter out in the yard. Then they
-looked carefully over a tree near the window, and there they saw the
-broken-winged bird in the midst of quite a flock of others.
-
-Of course the outside birds were called by the captive, and they must
-have carried him out in some way. Birds have been seen to carry off one
-who was wounded, in two ways. One way was by two birds each taking in
-his beak a wing of the helpless bird and so flying away with him. This
-has been seen, and more than once, by men who tell the truth.
-
-The second way birds have been seen to help another was by one getting
-under the helpless one and so holding him up on the back. This also has
-been seen by men whose word can be trusted. You remember I told you such
-a story about the shrike.
-
-So many untrue stories are told about the birds that I am very careful
-not to tell you anything that is not strictly true.
-
-
-If you live in the South, you more often see the ORCHARD ORIOLE. He is
-not quite so gay in his dress as the Baltimore. He has chestnut color
-with his black. His mate is different. She is olive on the back, and
-yellow below, and she has bright blue legs and feet, which look as if
-they were covered with kid.
-
-The nest is a hanging one, of course, but it does not usually swing like
-other oriole nests. It is a little supported at the bottom. It is very
-beautiful, for it is made of one kind of fine grass. When it is first
-made, its green color makes it hard to see among the leaves. And as it
-dries, it turns a rich yellow, like bright clean straw. It is not so
-high as the Baltimore's, and not hung to the end of a branch. It is
-often in an apple-tree, for this bird likes to be near people.
-
-The song of the orchard oriole is different from the Baltimore's. It is
-longer, and has more variety. His mate sings also. Her voice is sweeter
-than his and not so loud.
-
-
-If you live in California, the oriole you know will be the ARIZONA
-HOODED ORIOLE. Sometimes he is called the palm-leaf oriole for a reason
-you will soon see. He is a beautiful, slender bird, having bright orange
-color with his black. He wears more black than some of the family. His
-face and throat and tail and wings are of that color, though the wings
-have two white bars. His mate is yellowish below and olive brown above.
-
-This bird makes the regular oriole family cradle. Sometimes it swings
-free like the Baltimore's, but not always. It is made of slender, wiry
-grass, which is green, so that it is hard to see. Sometimes a sort of
-thread from the edge of palm leaves is used.
-
-This bird sometimes selects a droll place for her nest. She swings it
-from the under side of a palm or banana leaf. You know a banana leaf is
-long and wide, and makes a comfortable shade in a hot day; and it does
-just as well for an umbrella when it rains. It is hard to see how a bird
-can fasten a nest to a smooth leaf. But Mrs. Grinnell has seen it done
-in her own yard, and she tells us how the little builder goes to work.
-
-First she takes a thread in her beak and pushes it through the leaf,
-making a hole, of course. Then she flies around to the other side of the
-broad leaf, and standing there a minute she pulls the thread through,
-and pushes it back, making another hole. Thus she goes on, flying from
-one side to the other till she has sewed her bag to the strong leaf.
-
-Except in the place they choose for their nest, these orioles are about
-the same as their Eastern cousins, and oriole little folk are the same
-the world over, I think.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-THE CROW-BLACKBIRD BRANCH
-
-(_Icteridæ_)--Continued
-
-
-THE fourth branch of this family is of crow-blackbirds and grackles.
-They have a right to the name of blackbird, for they are quite black. At
-least they look so a little way off, but if one gets near and sees the
-sunshine on them, he will see that they reflect blue or green or purple,
-from their feathers.
-
-Then, too, like others of their family, they go in flocks, and they have
-a dignified walk on the ground. Some birds who are so social that they
-like to live in a crowd prefer to go a little apart to nest. But these
-birds make their rude, clumsy nests all close together.
-
-Blackbirds are fond of corn; who can blame them for that? Thousands of
-them have been shot because they eat it. But farmers who shoot them
-forget, or perhaps they do not know, that corn is not the only thing
-they eat.
-
-Insects as well as birds are fond of corn, and it isn't so easy to keep
-them away. The birds eat great numbers of them, such as grasshoppers,
-caterpillars, beetles, and cut-worms, besides mice. All these creatures
-eat the farmers' crops. So when birds destroy them, they earn some of
-the corn. They do more than clear the fields of troublesome insects,
-they eat great quantities of the seeds of weeds that the farmer is
-always fighting.
-
-Blackbirds are most often seen on the ground, walking around with great
-dignity. They are looking for food in the grass, or in the field in
-ploughing time. When they are closely watched, it is often found that
-they are not in mischief.
-
-Mr. Warren, State Ornithologist of Pennsylvania, tells a story which
-shows how easy it is to be mistaken. He was with a friend who had thirty
-acres of corn growing, and was much vexed to see blackbirds walking
-about among the young plants. They seemed very busy about something, and
-he was sure they were pulling up his crop. So he got out his guns, and
-Mr. Warren went with him to punish the birds.
-
-They shot thirty-one of them. Then they began to see what they had been
-eating. In all the thirty-one, only seven had the least bit of corn, and
-even they were mostly filled with insects. The rest were stuffed full of
-insects which do much harm to young corn, mostly cut-worms.
-
-The farmer had killed thirty-one birds who were working for him as hard
-as they could. No money could hire help that would do so much good as
-they were doing.
-
-
-In the Eastern States we have the CROW BLACKBIRD, or PURPLE GRACKLE, and
-the BRONZED GRACKLE, whose habits are the same.
-
-The purple grackle is a handsome bird, larger than a robin, with very
-light eyes. His plumage looks black in the shade, but when the sun is on
-it, shows rich green and blue, and it shines like satin. The bronzed
-grackle shows purple, and blue, and green, with metallic bronze on the
-back.
-
-The purple grackle is said to eat corn, and also the eggs and young of
-other birds. But what he eats has been found out by the Agricultural
-Department, in the way I told you of. It is given out by them that he
-does not do so much harm to nests as has been said, and among the crops
-he does good enough to pay for all the corn he eats.
-
-It is very hard to see just what a bird is eating. It is not even safe
-to believe all we think we see.
-
-The only time the purple grackle can do more harm than good is when he
-comes with a big crowd of his friends, and settles down to spend the
-winter. Then he should be driven away from crops.
-
-I want you to understand me about this. I do not say that these birds
-never eat the eggs and young of others. What I do say is, that there is
-plenty of evidence to show that they do it not half so much as people
-say. I have watched birds for twenty years, as closely, I believe, as
-any one ever watched them, and I never saw any of the bad deeds that are
-laid to the blue jay, or the shrike, or the kingbird, or the purple
-grackle. They may be guilty occasionally, but they are not the villains
-they are often said to be.
-
-Besides, however bad we may call a few birds, we are ourselves worse.
-Birds kill only to eat. Many of them are made to feed upon each other,
-and cannot live in any other way. They kill quickly, and do not
-generally--if they ever do--torture their prey.
-
-How is it with us? We kill for sport, or for useless show, and we kill
-in a way that often wounds and leaves our victim to suffer tortures
-before he dies. Do you think it is fair for us to say hard things about
-the birds?
-
-
-In the Rocky Mountains and west of them the common blackbird is BREWER'S
-BLACKBIRD, sometimes called blue-headed grackle. He is not so shy as
-his brother of the East. He is amiable and friendly with people, and as
-familiar as the robin in New England. He is often seen in the streets of
-towns. He will come into yards, and even take food from a doorstep.
-
-Brewer's blackbird is a restless, uneasy fellow, like most of his
-family. He is always bustling about, and flying hither and thither with
-rustling wings.
-
-In summer, these birds feed mostly upon insects, which they find on the
-ground. They have an amusing way of being fair in their feeding. As they
-walk about in little social parties looking for food, those who come
-last in the string find the insects nearly all picked up before they get
-a chance. So they take this clever way of getting their turn at the good
-things. Every few minutes those in the rear rise and fly over the heads
-of their friends and alight just before them. So they have the first
-pick for a while. Then, in a few minutes, those left behind fly over
-their heads, and take the lead for a time. So, without any quarreling,
-each one has a fair chance with all the rest. Other birds have found out
-this way of playing fair. I have seen great blue herons three feet tall
-do the same thing.
-
-In winter, when insects are scarce, the blackbird turns to grain and the
-seeds of weeds. But it has been found that he does more good by the
-weeds he keeps down than harm by the grain he eats.
-
-Brewer's blackbird usually nests in trees, not very high. One time a
-naturalist going about in Arizona, where are few or no trees, found a
-curious thing,--a good many blackbird nests, a little settlement one
-might call it, on the ground, and all strung along close to the edge of
-a steep bank. At first he could not see why the birds had chosen to be
-on the edge of a precipice. Then he remembered that horses and cattle
-roamed over the country, and these animals are careful never to graze
-close to an edge which might crumble and give them a fall. He concluded
-that the birds had wit enough to know that. If their nests were out on
-the plains, they would be likely to be stepped on, but near the edge,
-they were safe from hoofs.
-
-The common call of Brewer's blackbird is a harsh "chack;" but in the
-spring he turns musical, and serenades his mate with what we must call
-songs, because songs are what he intends. They are droll enough to
-listen to, and not very sweet.
-
-This bird is about the size of a robin, with violet-colored head in the
-sunlight. His mate is slate-colored.
-
-Birds who live in a crowd learn to be fair in their treatment of one
-another. An interesting story is told of the way a flock of blackbirds
-go to bed at night. They come to the roosting-place in little parties
-from all the country around. One would suppose the first one to get
-there would choose his place to sleep, and let the last one take what
-was left.
-
-But no! as they arrive, they alight in some big old tree outside the
-roosting-place. When all are in, they fly up together, circle around for
-a while, then all settle at the same time in the place where they are to
-sleep.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-THE CROW FAMILY
-
-(_Corvidæ_)[17]
-
-
-THIS is a large family. Some of our most intelligent birds belong to it.
-There are first the crows, much larger than a robin and dressed in
-black. They have long, pointed wings, and tails square at the end. They
-live in a crowd, and walk on the ground.
-
-Then there are the jays, about the size of a robin, all bright-colored
-birds. They have short, rounded wings, and long tails which come down
-almost to a point in the middle.
-
-And then the magpies, between the other two in size. They have tails
-longer and more pointed than the jays, and are dressed in black with
-showy white markings.
-
-
-The common AMERICAN CROW is a bird that everybody knows. He lives all
-over our country, and seems to like one part as well as another. There
-is enough to be said about this bird to fill this whole book. So I shall
-not try to tell all about him.
-
-The crow is thought by many people to be the most knowing bird in
-America, and he is the one who has been most abused. He does some
-mischief, it is true, but he does a great deal more good. So say the
-officers of the Department who have looked into his food. They have
-found that he does pull up some corn; but he stuffs himself and his
-family with thousands, and even millions, of grubs, and insects, and
-mice, and other small creatures, that would have done far more damage to
-the crops than he.
-
-Farmers have often killed or driven away the crows, because they thought
-they were hurting their crops. But sometimes they have found out their
-mistake, and have been glad to get them back again.
-
-A story comes from the West which shows what I mean. One year the
-farmers were alarmed to see a great many crows around their fields. They
-had never seen so many there. Of course they thought they had come to
-eat the corn, so they began to kill them. I won't tell you the ugly
-story of the war against the birds. After it had gone on awhile, the
-farmers began to notice that crows were not the only ones who had come.
-A new grub that they had never seen before was on hand. There were
-millions of them, and they were always hungry. Young corn plants seemed
-to suit them, and when corn was gone, they began eating the grass.
-
-It never came into the farmers' heads that the birds had anything to do
-with the grubs. So they kept up their war on the crows till few were
-left.
-
-It's easier to drive away birds than insects, so the grubs went on
-eating. There were no crows left to trouble, and yet the crops got
-smaller every year. At last some one had sense enough to see that the
-crows had come on purpose to eat the grubs, and that they had driven
-away their best friends, the most useful helpers they could possibly
-have.
-
-When they saw how stupid they had been, they began to coax the birds
-back. They sent out and had crows caught and brought to their fields to
-work for them. The birds took hold of the business, and made short work
-of the corn-eating grub, and the farmers learned a good lesson.
-
-You may think it strange that the crows should know where the grubs
-were, but birds are very sharp to find their food. It is well known that
-when there gets to be an unusual number of insects in one place, more
-birds will come to feed on them. Some time when you are in the country
-when grass is cut, notice how many birds will come to eat the
-grasshoppers and other creatures that are uncovered when the hay is
-taken away.
-
-The crows take the same fair way of going to roost that the Brewer's
-blackbirds do.
-
-I could tell you stories--true ones, too--all day about this bird, and
-his services to the farmer. We all know how wise he is, and how hard it
-is to trap him.
-
-I will give you one little story, to show his kindness to his fellows.
-Then, when you have a chance to watch one, I hope you will take pains to
-see for yourself what he does and what he eats. Do not believe all you
-hear or read about him, for I'm sorry to say there are some persons who
-like so well to tell a sensational story that they do not take any
-trouble to find out if it is true.
-
-The story is this. Two crows were caught and kept in a large cage out of
-doors. It happened to be a time when food for birds was rather scarce.
-Some one noticed that the birds seemed to eat a good deal, and he set
-himself to watch them. He found that the prisoners in the cage were
-giving some of their food through the bars to their hungry friends
-outside. Could men be more unselfish?
-
-There is no end to the funny pranks that are told of crows who have been
-tamed and lived with people. One that I heard of liked to get out in the
-yard when clothes from the wash were hung out. He would walk along on
-the clothesline and pull out every clothespin, carrying each one to the
-roof and laying it safely away. Of course this let the wet garments fall
-in the dirt, and he was scolded well for his mischief. Then he would fly
-up to the roof and throw every pin down to the ground, as if he said,
-"Well, take your old clothespins!"
-
-Another tame crow was very fond of pulling over a work-basket, and
-scattering the spools and thimbles and other things in it. One day he
-got hold of a paper of needles. This he opened, and then went on to hide
-them, which crows always like to do with everything. He took each needle
-and pushed it into the bed, as if it were a cushion, and hammered each
-one in out of sight.
-
-
-I hope you know the BLUE JAY. He is a beautiful bird in different shades
-of blue, set off with white and black, and with a fine crest. His mate
-is the same. This is the jay we know in the East and South.
-
-[Illustration: BLUE JAY]
-
-He is a noisy bird, full of fun and antics. He makes himself heard
-wherever he goes. This has given him the name of being quarrelsome. It
-is often said that he is always fighting. But that is a mistake, made
-because people do not look closely enough. He is boisterous and jolly,
-but he rarely quarrels.
-
-There is one time in his life when he is as still as a mouse. Then he
-comes to his tree so quietly that you cannot hear him. That is when
-there is a nest to look after.
-
-The nest of a blue jay is usually not very high, in a tree. While his
-mate is sitting, he takes the best care of her. He brings food to her,
-and often sings to her. This song is very low; one can hardly hear it;
-but it is one of the sweetest of bird songs.
-
-No bird is more loving to his little folk than the blue jay, and not one
-is more frantic when anything happens to them. James Russell Lowell, the
-poet, loved the birds, and has written delightful things about them. He
-once found a family of young blue jays who seemed to be in trouble. He
-had a ladder brought, and went up to the nest to see if he could help
-them. He found that they had got caught in the nest lining, and could
-not get away. They were full grown, and the old birds had worked hard
-from morning till night to keep them fed.
-
-As soon as Mr. Lowell saw what was the matter, he took out his knife to
-cut the strings that held them. At first when he came near, the old
-birds were very much frightened. They flew around his head and cried,
-and were going to fight him. But jays are wise birds, and in a moment
-they saw that he did not mean to hurt them. So they perched close by
-him, so near he could put his hand on them. Then they watched him while
-he cut the little ones loose. All of them could fly, and they did, at
-once.
-
-One of the nestlings had been so tightly held that one leg was withered
-and dead, but the next day Mr. Lowell saw him hopping about the garden
-path, on one leg, while his parents brought him food, and took great
-care of him.
-
-The blue jay, like most birds, is kind to others. One man found a little
-flock taking care of an old, blind jay. They fed him, and led him to
-water to bathe. They warned him of danger, and in every way looked out
-for his comfort as if he were a nestling.
-
-Besides being a singer, this bird is a mimic. He can imitate the songs
-of other birds, as well as many other sounds. A lady once had a blue jay
-who had fallen from the nest. She brought him up, and he was very tame.
-She told me that he learned to sing like a mockingbird, and did it
-almost as well. This bird was very fond of her. When she tried to give
-him his freedom, he wouldn't have it. If she slipped away from him, he
-would sit up in a tree and scream like a lost child. Then, when she came
-into his sight, he would fly down to her shoulder and rub his head
-against her cheek like a kitten, he was so happy to be back with her.
-
-The blue jay is a useful bird. Dr. Brewer says that one pair of jays
-will feed their young in one season five hundred thousand caterpillars;
-also that one pair of jays will destroy one million insect eggs in a
-winter.
-
-Many hard things have been said about this bird,--for one thing, that he
-eats eggs and young birds. You will notice, however, that many who
-repeat these stories about him say, "I have not seen the bird do so, but
-some one else has." Testimony like this is worth nothing. Such things
-are copied from one book to another because it is much easier to take
-what is set down in the books than to go out and see for one's self.
-Often a story which has no truth in it is said over and over till people
-believe it because they have heard it so often.
-
-Believe me, the blue jay is not half so bad as he is painted, and he has
-many lovable traits to make up for what he does do.
-
-Mr. Keyser brought up a young blue jay from the nest. He put him for a
-while into a cage with two young orioles. Like all young birds, all
-three of the youngsters were hungry, and expected everybody to feed
-them. So the young jay opened wide his mouth, and waited for something
-good to drop into it. He was met by the two orioles with their mouths
-wide open. There they stood, face to face, all asking to be fed. It was
-a funny sight.
-
-Then the blue jay baby was put into another cage, where were two young
-catbirds. To these he was very loving. He would sidle up to them and
-caress them, stroking their backs and wings with his bill. He insisted
-on sleeping between the two on the perch. He looked very droll with a
-small bird on each side of him, all snuggled up together.
-
-After a while the blue jay had a whole cage to himself. Then the other
-cages were moved to the front porch, and he was left alone on the back
-porch. This did not please him at all; he was lonely. He called and
-cried and fretted about till he was placed beside the others. Then he
-gave a cry of joy, and really squealed with delight.
-
-
-The West is richer than the East in jays. There are several in the
-Rocky Mountains and California. STELLER'S JAY is said to represent the
-Eastern bird I have been telling about. He is different in looks and
-larger. He is darker blue, with some sooty brown, and he has a fine
-crest. But he is the same noisy, jolly fellow as his cousin on the
-Atlantic side of the country.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN MAGPIE]
-
-
-If your home is in the West, beyond the Mississippi River, of course you
-know the AMERICAN MAGPIE. He is a large, splendid fellow, who looks
-especially fine when he is flying over your head.
-
-The magpie is all in black and white: white below and in shoulder
-patches, and black on the breast and above. In the sunlight he shows
-purple and blue and green shades over the black. He has a very long
-tail, which is wide in the middle and runs down almost to a point at the
-end. This is very showy, when he spreads it wide in flying.
-
-In California the magpie shows a curious variation. On one side of the
-mountains the magpie has a yellow bill, but the magpie on the other side
-has a black one, though in every other way they seem to be the same.
-
-The magpie is a social bird. Even in nesting time he likes plenty of
-neighbors. A party of them will settle in a little grove and build
-several nests in it. The nests of this bird are the queerest bird homes
-you ever saw. They look like big covered baskets. They are half the size
-of a bushel basket, and made of sticks outside. There is an opening on
-each side for the bird to go in and out. Those I have seen were in the
-tops of low trees.
-
-The beautiful tail of the magpie seems to be a great care to him. When
-he flies,--as I said,--he spreads it wide and makes a great show with
-it. When he is going about on a tree, he jerks and twitches it all the
-time. No doubt every jerk means something, if we could only understand.
-When on the ground, he holds the precious tail up carefully, so that it
-shall not touch the earth. He is a very dignified bird when walking
-about in this way, looking for the grubs, grasshoppers, crickets, and
-other creatures on which he feeds. But sometimes he has no dignity at
-all. He scolds, and screams, and acts like a bad child. He isn't
-particular about his food. He will eat almost anything, even scraps from
-a kitchen.
-
-Major Bendire tells a comical story of the cunning of some magpies in
-getting food away from a dog. The dog carried his bone with some meat on
-it to the lawn in front of the major's tent, and lay down to enjoy it,
-dog-fashion. In a minute or two, a little party of six magpies came
-around, probably hoping to be invited to dinner. The dog did not take
-the hint, but went on gnawing.
-
-Then the birds seemed to consider, and after a few minutes they placed
-themselves around the dog. One stood right in front of his nose about
-two feet away. Another one took his place close to the dog's tail, while
-two stood on each side.
-
-When all the birds were ready, the one by the tail gave it a sharp peck.
-No dog could stand that insult. The victim forgot his bone, wheeled
-around, and dashed after that bird. He did not catch him with the first
-grab, and the wily bird fluttered away. He did not go fast enough to
-show the dog he could not catch him, but he led him on and kept him
-eager to get at him as long as he could.
-
-But what happened to the dog's dinner all this time? Of course you have
-guessed that the instant the dog left, the five hungry magpies pounced
-upon the bone. They didn't mind eating at the second table. They knew
-their time was short, and they made good use of it. I'm afraid they
-"gobbled."
-
-When the dog saw that he couldn't catch the magpie, he thought of his
-dinner, and came back. The birds stepped one side, and he took his
-place again.
-
-Of course the birds were not half satisfied, and besides, one of them
-had not had even a taste. So they made ready to play the little trick
-again. Now see their fair play with one another! The bird who had coaxed
-the dog away had his turn at the head of the table, while another one
-did the teasing. They repeated this several times, and each time a
-different bird led the dog away.
-
-The major was a trained observer, and he could tell the birds apart. One
-had a longer tail, another had a broken feather, and another was
-smaller. So he could easily see that each time a different bird had the
-best chance. He was sure they had planned the whole thing out.
-
-I once had a chance to study the ways of some magpies. The birds were
-busy in their nests, and I was well hidden and quiet, so they did not
-see me. I heard much soft, gentle talk from them, and at last a sweet
-song. I was much surprised at this, and hoped to know a good deal more
-about them, but the next time I called on them, they saw me. Such a row
-as they made! They flew around my head, shouting and screaming at me,
-till I was glad to get out of the grove. I could not blame the birds,
-for magpies are much prized as cage-birds. They readily learn to talk,
-and are intelligent and interesting pets, so that the nests are robbed
-all the time. Of course they are ready to fight for their little ones.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[17] See Appendix, 16.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-THE LARK FAMILY
-
-(_Alaudidæ_)[18]
-
-
-THERE are a good many kinds of larks in the world, but only one comes to
-us, the HORNED LARK, or shore lark. He differs a little in color in the
-various places he is found over our broad country, but not enough to
-call him another species.
-
-In places where there is a great deal of rain, birds take on a slightly
-different shade from their brothers who live in dry places. So there are
-several varieties of the horned lark. But dress isn't everything, and,
-after all, he is the same bird in habits and manners wherever we find
-him in the United States. He is streaked brown on the back, and white
-below, with yellow throat and black and white markings.
-
-
-The way you may always know a PRAIRIE HORNED LARK, of whom I will speak,
-is by the pretty little tufts of feathers that stand up on his head
-like horns, and the very long nail on his hind toe.
-
-[Illustration: DESERT HORNED LARK]
-
-Another way you may know this bird is that he lives on the ground, and
-never perches in a tree. Sometimes he gets up on a fence to sing, but he
-likes best to run along the road, or in a field, and he never--never
-hops. The place to look for him is a field or pasture, or on a country
-road.
-
-When insects are abroad, he eats the more dainty small ones, young
-grasshoppers and locusts before they get big and tough, small beetles
-and larvæ; and baby larks are fed on them. But he doesn't starve when
-they are gone; he is fond of seeds of weeds and grasses.
-
-The nest of the horned lark is on the ground, and the little mother is
-very clever in hiding it, and not showing people where it is. Many
-birds, you know, will stay on the nest till one almost steps on them,
-and then fly up with a great fuss, thus telling their secret. When the
-wise little lark sees one coming, she quietly slips off her nest. Then
-she crouches to the ground, and creeps away. When she thinks she is far
-enough, she rises to her full height, and begins to eat, or to walk
-around as if she had nothing on her mind, and there were no such thing
-as a nest anywhere about. No matter how long one may stay there
-hoping to find the nest, she will not go back, not even to see if it is
-safe, so long as any one is near. If all birds were so wily, there would
-be fewer nests robbed, and we should have more birds.
-
-The little home so carefully guarded is well made. The bird scratches
-out a little hollow and lines it with grass or thistledown, that is, if
-she can't get what she likes best. Her choice is for nice soft mullein
-leaves, which she pulls to pieces. These, you know, are thick and
-smooth, and must make a warm, dry bed for the little larks.
-
-The brave little mother nests so early that she is often caught in a
-snowstorm. Nests have been found with the bird on them, when the snow
-had to be brushed away to get at her, actually sitting under the snow.
-
-When the young larks can run about, and before they can fly, the father
-takes them in charge. Then the mother sits again, and hatches out
-another brood.
-
-The horned lark sings on the wing, as does the skylark of Europe that
-we've heard so much about. It is supposed that he cannot equal that
-famous bird, but so few have heard him, it is hardly safe to say so. I
-once heard a horned lark sing. He ran across the road in front of the
-carriage, flew to a fence, and gave an exquisite little song. If it had
-come down to us while the singer was soaring about over our heads, I
-think few bird songs could have excelled it.
-
-The feather tufts which are called horns stand up when the bird is
-excited. Usually they lie back nearly flat on the head.
-
-In the picture you can see one of these birds in his usual attitude,
-walking.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[18] See Appendix, 17.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-THE FLYCATCHING FAMILY
-
-(_Tyrannidæ_)[19]
-
-
-LARKS may be scarce, but we have plenty of flycatchers, and they all
-look very much alike. They are mostly in dull colors, and they have a
-way of raising the head feathers which gives them a little crest. Then
-they have rather thick necks, and they sit up very straight on the
-perch.
-
-They catch living flies, as you see by the name, and they have their own
-way of doing it. No flycatcher ever scrambles around like a fussy little
-warbler, snatching a fly here and there. Far from it! It is a dignified
-family, and none of them ever seems to be in a hurry.
-
-The true flycatcher way to get a dinner is to sit still and wait. The
-very babies in the nest are patient little fellows. They never make half
-the row over their dinner that young robins do. They could give lessons
-in table manners to some young folks I have seen. And waiting seems to
-be a good way, for nobody is better fed than a flycatcher.
-
-[Illustration: KINGBIRD]
-
-On his perch the waiting bird sits perfectly still, but keeps a sharp
-lookout all around him. When a fly or other insect comes near that he
-thinks he will like, he dashes out and catches it as it flies. Then he
-goes back to his perch and waits for another.
-
-Some of the family have the habit of singing as they wait. The wood
-pewee drawls out his sweet "pee-u-ee," the phoebe sings his sharp
-"phoe-be" by the hour, and the least flycatcher snaps out his "chebec"
-till we are tired of hearing him.
-
-Flycatchers are classed among birds who do not sing, but several of them
-do sing,--not loud, like a robin, but low, quiet songs to the mate or
-the nestlings.
-
-
-One of the best known of the flycatchers all over the country is the
-KINGBIRD. He is a little smaller than a robin, and all in brownish
-black, with white breast. He has also white tips to his tail feathers,
-which look very fine when he spreads it out wide in flying.
-
-Among the head feathers of the kingbird is a small spot of orange color.
-This is called in the books a "concealed patch" because it is seldom
-seen, it is so hidden by the dark feathers.
-
-This bird does much good by eating many insects. It is often said that
-he eats bees. But a curious thing has been found out about this habit.
-It seems he has a choice in bees. He is fond of the drones which make no
-honey, and so are not useful in a hive. He will hunt drones all day, but
-he is shy of a honey bee. Do you know why? The bird has not told us, but
-we can guess that it is because the honey bee is armed with a sting, and
-can make it very uncomfortable for any bird who catches her.
-
-There is another reason too why the bird may prefer the drone. The honey
-bee usually flies low, where the flowers are, while the drone isn't
-after flowers and flies higher in the air. The kingbird sits higher than
-the honey bee flies, and the drones are the ones that come near him.
-
-Another insect that the kingbird is fond of is the robber fly, which
-destroys hundreds of honey bees. That should make every bee-keeper his
-friend.
-
-These things have been found out in the way I told you, by shooting the
-birds to see what they had been eating.
-
-Mr. Bryant, who knows birds well, tells of a bee-keeper in California
-who saw a great many kingbirds among his bees. Of course he thought they
-were eating them, and he killed one hundred of them. On looking into
-their stomachs to see if they had eaten honey bees, he found them filled
-with drones. They had been working for him all the time, for every
-bee-keeper likes to have drones killed.
-
-It has been said that the kingbird is annoying to other birds, and he is
-called a tyrant. I wanted to know if this was true. I did not go to
-books to find out, for many people--as I have told you--do not study for
-themselves, but repeat what some one else has said. The way I took to
-find out was to notice the ways of every kingbird I could see. For many
-years I have watched them hours at a time, for weeks together. I spend
-every summer among the birds, and almost everywhere I go I find
-kingbirds.
-
-In this way I have found out that the kingbird is one of the most
-peaceable of birds. He drives strangers away from the tree where his
-nest is, and so does every other bird. The crow he seems to consider his
-enemy, and often flies after him, but excepting that, I have never seen
-a kingbird disturb any bird who was minding his own business. He is not
-half so much of a tyrant as the robin or the hummingbird.
-
-The kingbird is quiet and devoted to his family. He seems never to tire
-of catching insects. While young ones are in the nest, he may usually
-be seen from morning till night, sitting very straight upon a low perch,
-looking for flies of many kinds.
-
-Let me tell you a little story of a kingbird which I can assure you is
-true, for a gentleman whose word may be relied upon saw it near enough
-to be perfectly sure of the facts.
-
-A big bird, he did not notice what kind, was flying off with a nestling
-robin in his claws. All at once a kingbird flew at him so fiercely that
-he had to drop the young one to defend himself. The youngster could not
-fly, and of course began to fall. When the kingbird saw that, he left
-the thief and flew under the little bird. He held it up on his back, and
-flew carefully to the ground, where it slipped off safely.
-
-When a kingbird has been tamed and kept in a house, he has been found to
-be a very knowing fellow. One that I heard of saw that the people were
-friendly, and he lost all fear of them. His greatest pleasure seemed to
-be to keep warm. He would cuddle up to a lighted lamp, and dearly liked
-to crawl under the bedclothes. This pet was quiet and dignified, never a
-chatterbox. The only sounds he made were a few low notes like thanks,
-when he was fed.
-
-The nest of the kingbird is usually placed in a low tree like the
-apple-tree. It is made of anything that comes handy. I have seen one of
-white wool where sheep were kept, and one of gray moss on the seashore
-where it is found in plenty.
-
-
-The Western kingbird differs in color from the Eastern. He is more gray,
-with under parts bright yellow. He is said to be more social and more
-noisy than the sober Eastern bird. But in other respects they are much
-alike.
-
-This bird has been called quarrelsome, but persons who look closely at
-birds have said that what careless observers have called quarrels are
-really play. For the Western kingbird, the ARKANSAS KINGBIRD of the
-books, is a rather jolly fellow, says Major Bendire.
-
-All flycatchers are useful and should be carefully protected, says the
-same well-informed writer.
-
-
-The WOOD PEWEE is another common flycatcher. He is not generally seen
-about houses like the phoebe, who calls from the peak of the barn. He
-may be found in the orchard or the edge of the woods. There he will
-stand on a fence or low branch and sing or call by the hour, every few
-minutes flying out to catch a passing insect.
-
-This bird is in dark colors, with whitish breast and two white
-wing-bars. His common call is a plaintive, long-drawn-out "pee-u-ee"
-and sometimes "pee-ay," but he can sing a droll little song. One lady
-who watched a wood pewee build her nest heard her sing to herself as she
-worked what sounded like "O-wee-wee-wee."
-
-The nest made by this little mother is very pretty. It is most often on
-a dead limb where a branch starts out, making a broad foundation. For
-this reason the bird is called in the South, the dead-limb bird. The
-nests are not all alike. I have seen many closely covered with lichen,
-and some made of gray moss so thin that the eggs could be seen through
-it. Whatever it is made of, it is low and flat like a saucer, and so
-much like the branch it is on that it is not easy to see.
-
-Like other bird mothers, the wood pewee is devoted to her nestlings. She
-will shield them from the rain by sitting close on the nest and making
-an umbrella of herself. And when the sun comes down very hot on them,
-she has been seen to perch on the edge of the nest and spread her wings
-to act as a shade for them. It is pretty to see this bird with her
-little family when they have left the nest and are being taught to take
-care of themselves. She makes many sweet little noises which sound like
-talk, or a sort of whispering.
-
-
-The WESTERN WOOD PEWEE looks like his Eastern brother, but he is a very
-different bird. His dress is about the same, and he catches his flies in
-pewee fashion, but his voice is not in the least like that we hear on
-the Atlantic side of the country.
-
-The Eastern wood pewee has a low, sweet voice, of which one cannot get
-tired. But the bird of the West has loud, harsh notes, so dismal in tone
-that they are painful to listen to. His song is almost the only really
-unpleasant bird song I know.
-
-The nest of this bird is a rather deep cup saddled on to a large limb.
-When it is in a cottonwood grove, it is covered with the sticky white
-cotton from the trees. It is very pretty when fresh, but it soon gets
-soiled, and then it is not nice to look at or to handle.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[19] See Appendix, 18.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-THE HUMMING FAMILY
-
-(_Trochilidæ_)[20]
-
-
-THIS is an American family, and no country in the world can show a more
-beautiful one. There are more than four hundred species, and some of
-them hardly bigger than a bee. All of these birds have brilliant colors
-that are called metallic. That is, they glitter like metal, and they
-show different colors when they are turned different ways.
-
-All hummingbirds fly very swiftly. You know how they go,--not straight
-like most birds, but darting one way and another so quickly they can
-hardly be seen. As they fly, their wings move so fast they look almost
-like little clouds, and we hear the low noise we call humming.
-
-Hummingbirds eat nothing but tiny insects, and the honey of flowers,
-which they suck up through their long bill. They take their food without
-alighting, for they can hold themselves still before a flower, with the
-wonderful wings, as long as they choose.
-
-The bill of a hummingbird is much longer than his head. It is something
-like a pair of tubes through which he can draw up the sweet juices he
-likes. The tongue is long too, and it can be pushed out far beyond the
-end of the bill. It looks like a stiff white thread.
-
-We have in the Eastern States but one species, the ruby-throat, but
-there are several in California.
-
-
-No bird is more charming than our common RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD. He
-is most often seen flitting about among the flowers. But now and then
-one may catch him sitting demurely on a dead twig, dressing his tiny
-feathers.
-
-This bird is all in green, with a brilliant ruby-colored throat, which
-looks like a gem as he darts about. His mate is in green also, but her
-throat is white.
-
-You would not think this pretty midget could be a fighter, but he is.
-When a hummingbird finds a vine full of sweet blossoms, or a bed of
-bright nasturtiums, or any good place to feed in, he claims the whole of
-it for himself. He tries to drive away every other hummingbird who
-comes near it. Sometimes two of them will carry on a quarrel over a
-honeysuckle vine for days.
-
-The hummingbird is the most pugnacious bird in America. If he were as
-big as a crow, he would be a terror to man and beast, for he is afraid
-of nothing. This spirited mite of a bird will even attack an eagle, who
-is big enough to eat him at a mouthful. He beats him too, for he comes
-down on top of his head, where the big, clumsy fellow cannot get at him.
-There he pecks and pulls out feathers till the eagle is glad to get out
-of his clutches.
-
-A hummingbird's nest is one of the prettiest things in the world. It is
-not much bigger than a walnut, and is made of soft plant down, usually
-of a yellowish gray color.
-
-Perhaps you don't see how plant down can be made to keep in shape,
-without twigs or grasses to hold it. If you could see the bird make it,
-you would understand at once. She brings her stuff in small mouthfuls,
-and works it into a solid mass by strong efforts with beak and feet. She
-pokes and prods each tiny bunch as she brings it, till she makes it all
-hold together. It is a sort of felt.
-
-Then the little worker covers the outside with bits of lichen picked off
-the trees, and held on, it is said, by cobwebs. This makes the nest
-look exactly like the branch it is on. So it is very hard to see.
-
-It takes a hummingbird several days of hard work to make a nest, because
-she can bring only a little at a time. She does it alone too; her mate
-has not been seen to help her at all.
-
-I think the male ruby-throat does not help in the nest-building because
-the little mother will not let him. She knows just how the cradle is to
-be made, and she doesn't want him to bother her. She likes to have her
-nest to herself just as she likes to have her honeysuckle to herself. I
-don't say positively that is the reason, you know; I only guess it is.
-
-After the nest is made, and two eggs about as big as small beans are
-laid, the hummingbird begins to sit. When the nestlings come out of the
-egg, they are about the size of honey bees, with bills no larger than
-the head of a common pin. Twenty-one days they stay in the nest and are
-fed by their hard-working little mother.
-
-When the twins get their feathers, and their bills are growing longer
-and longer, they sit up across the top of the nest, side by side. Then
-they are very pretty, and not at all afraid of people. They will let one
-gently stroke their backs. They will even answer in a soft murmur one
-who talks to them.
-
-Hummingbirds are never so afraid of people as other birds. They are
-easily tamed. But they should never be caged, for they will not live
-long in a house. They need food that we cannot give them.
-
-A man had a hummingbird whom he kept alive a long time by letting him go
-free when he seemed to need change of food. He would fly off, but always
-came back. After the bird got to be very tame, the man brought two young
-hummingbirds and put them in the cage with him. He did not notice them
-much till they began to droop. Then the man opened the door to let them
-out.
-
-At once the elder bird took the little ones in charge, and coaxed them
-to fly out with him. He led them to a place where he had found the tiny
-spiders these birds like, and showed them how to get what they wanted.
-They all ate their fill and then came back to the house, where they were
-well contented to be.
-
-The way the mother hummingbird feeds her babies is curious. When she
-comes with food, she alights on the edge of the nest, and pulls a little
-one up so that she can get at it. Then she runs her long, slim bill down
-its throat, and pokes the food in with little jerks. It looks as if it
-would kill the youngster, but he seems to like it. Anyway, he grows
-very fast, and--as I said--in three weeks he is beautifully feathered,
-with a bill as long as his mother's, and ready to fly.
-
-A lady who had two young hummingbirds told me that they slept so soundly
-they were like dead birds. One could take them up and carry them about,
-and they would not wake. In cold weather she often wrapped one up in a
-piece of flannel and laid him in a soft, warm place, and he never
-stirred till morning.
-
-The way she got this pair of birds was interesting. She was walking in
-the woods and broke a dead branch from a tree, to use for something. On
-turning it over she saw a nest, and strange to say two little birds in
-it. She had been holding it upside down, but they had held on so tightly
-that they did not fall out.
-
-The lady did not know what to do. She did not want baby hummingbirds,
-but she couldn't put the branch back, and she was afraid their mother
-would not find them if she left them. So she took them home. She had no
-trouble to feed them, and they lived with her six weeks, and died by
-accident at last.
-
-It is thought that the male ruby-throat does not come to the nest at
-all, but he must have some way of knowing how things are going on. At
-Mrs. Wright's summer home a mother hummingbird was killed in a
-hailstorm, while young were in the nest. At once the father, or at least
-a male bird, came and fed and took care of the nestlings till they flew.
-
-
-In California one of the most common of this family is ANNA'S
-HUMMINGBIRD. He is green, with a throat and crown of changeable colors,
-lilac and red.
-
-The nest of this bird is usually, like the ruby-throat's, of plant down
-covered with lichens. But some have been found made of the blossoms of
-the eucalyptus, or gum-tree. This bird is as easily tamed as the
-ruby-throat, and seems to act a good deal like him.
-
-Mrs. Grinnell found a nest in her yard in California. The mother allowed
-herself to be photographed in many positions. The young ones were never
-afraid, and did not mind the camera in the least. Hummingbirds never
-seem to have any fear of people.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[20] See Appendix, 19.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-THE SWIFT FAMILY
-
-(_Micropodidæ_)[21]
-
-
-SWIFTS are curious birds, with strange habits. The one we know by sight
-in the East is the chimney swift. Most like him in the West is Vaux's
-swift. His ways are like the common chimney swift's, and his looks
-nearly the same.
-
-
-The CHIMNEY SWIFT is often called the chimney swallow, but it is very
-easy to tell one from a swallow. One way is, that when a swift is flying
-about over our heads, he looks as if he had no tail. The tail is very
-short, not half so long as the wing. He looks more like a bat than a
-bird.
-
-Then the swift flies in a different way. A swallow soars a good deal,
-that is, moves without beating the wings, a sort of gliding through the
-air. But a swift beats the wings much more frequently. A swallow will
-often alight on a telegraph-wire or a roof. A swift is said never to
-alight except to sleep.
-
-This bird is so much at home on wing that he even gets the twigs to make
-the nest while flying. These twigs are the smallest ones on the ends of
-dead branches, and are easily snapped off. The bird flies at them,
-snatches one in beak or feet, breaks it off, and goes right on, without
-stopping.
-
-When he gets his twig, he carries it to a dark, sooty chimney. A queer
-place for a home, surely. They used to choose a hollow tree or a cave to
-live in, and that seems much nicer. But chimneys are now more plentiful
-than hollow trees. And besides, they are nearer the bird's food. So
-chimney homes are now the fashion in the swift family.
-
-To make a swift nest, the twigs are glued to the chimney in the shape of
-a little bracket. The glue is the saliva of the bird, which is gummy,
-and gets hard as it dries, and looks like isinglass.
-
-The mouth of a chimney swift is very odd. You have heard of "stretching
-a mouth from ear to ear." That's just what the swift does every time he
-opens his. It needs to be big, for he gathers up his food in it. While
-he is flying around in the air, he is busy catching tiny flying
-creatures, such as flies and beetles, and thus keeping the air clear for
-us.
-
-The tail of this bird is another queer thing. It has no soft feathery
-tips like most birds' tails. It ends in sharp spines, like needles.
-These are most useful to brace him against the rough chimney where he
-sleeps. These spines are really the stiff shafts or stems of the
-feathers, sticking out beyond the plumey part.
-
-The chimney swift hangs himself up to sleep. He fastens his sharp claws
-into the rough bricks, and props himself firmly with his spiny tail.
-Even when the young swift is but two weeks old, he crawls out of the
-nest and hangs himself up under it. He seems to like that for a change
-from forever lying in a narrow bracket.
-
-Chimney swifts are social birds. They can't bear to be alone. They are
-almost always seen flying about in small parties, and calling to each
-other as they go, a strange, chattering cry. They are of a sooty color
-suitable to their sooty home, and the pair are alike. Vaux's swift is a
-little smaller and paler than the common chimney swift.
-
-The young swift is longer in his nursery than any bird of his size in
-the United States. He is four weeks old before he ventures out of his
-grimy home, though before that he will come up to the door to be fed.
-
-A late writer in a newspaper tells a little story showing the affection
-of a chimney swift for her little one. The writer had watched all summer
-a party of swifts who lived in one of his chimneys. A month or more
-after he supposed that all had flown away to the South beyond our
-southern boundary, where they spend the winter, he heard the twittering
-of one in the chimney. He took out the fireboard and found there a young
-bird. He was full grown and able to fly, but he was fastened by a
-horsehair to the nest. This had been pulled off by his weight, and lay
-on the hearth, holding him prisoner.
-
-The little fellow seemed to know he was to be helped, for he lay still
-while the man looked to see what was the matter. His mother soon came
-into the chimney with food. She took her place beside the man and
-waited, while he cut the strong hair and set the nestling free.
-
-Then the old bird went to work to teach him to fly. It was an hour or
-more before he learned to use his wings. As soon as he did, the two
-started off on their lonely journey to the far South, to join their
-friends who had been gone so long. How I wish we could know that they
-reached them.
-
-Insects were about gone when this happened, and this swift mother would
-have died if she had stayed, but she would not leave her little one to
-starve.
-
-It is a beautiful thing to see a large flock of swifts go to bed. If
-they all rushed in pell-mell, they might hurt one another. They begin by
-flying around high above the chimney in great circles. As they go around
-they sink lower, and the circles get smaller till it looks like an
-immense whirling funnel. When the birds forming the lower part of the
-funnel reach the top of the chimney, they plunge in. So in a short time
-the whole flock is in and no one hurt.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[21] See Appendix, 20.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-THE GOATSUCKER FAMILY
-
-(_Caprimulgidæ_)[22]
-
-
-THESE are queer-looking birds, having their front toes tied together by
-a kind of webbing, and almost no hind toe at all. The mouth, too, is
-almost as odd as the toes. It has a short beak, but is very wide, and it
-opens from ear to ear like the swift's. The plumage is so soft that the
-birds can fly without making the least sound.
-
-The two most common goatsuckers are the whip-poor-will and the
-nighthawk. They are both as large as a robin, and stouter. They are
-dressed in dull brown, and black and white, mottled all over. If you
-just glanced at the two, you might think them alike. But they are not
-marked alike, and all their ways are so different that there is no
-trouble in telling them apart.
-
-
-The WHIP-POOR-WILL has broad white tailmarks, with stripes on the back,
-and a narrow white band across the breast. He comes out only in the
-evening, and he flies low, without making a sound. He rests lengthwise
-of a log or fence, not across it as most birds do. His feet are too
-short to clasp a perch.
-
-On his log or fence the whip-poor-will sits and sings while he waits for
-his supper. You all know his song, his lively "whip-poor-will" over and
-over many times. It is a delightful evening sound, which I love to hear.
-It is said that his notes have been counted, and he has been found to
-repeat them several hundred times without stopping.
-
-When moths or other creatures which fly in the night come along, he
-catches them in his big mouth. But he is not obliged always to wait.
-Sometimes he flies near the ground like a shadow, looking for prey, and
-he often hops awkwardly along the road, for the same purpose. He picks
-up straggling insects, and in the West locusts.
-
-The whip-poor-will mother makes no nest. She finds a little hollow in
-the ground, among leaves or near bushes in the woods, and that's good
-enough for her nestlings. She lays two eggs, speckled and mottled so
-that they look like the ground and leaves around them. She looks almost
-the same herself. You might walk close to her and not see her.
-
-When young whip-poor-wills come out of the egg, they are dressed in
-speckled gray down. They cuddle down quietly by their mother, and the
-whole family is hard to see. When their eyes are shut, they look almost
-exactly like the earth and leaves among which they lie.
-
-If a whip-poor-will nest is disturbed, the mother will pretend to be
-badly hurt. She will tumble about on the ground and cry like the whine
-of a young puppy, trying to coax away the one she fears. If she is too
-much alarmed, she will clasp her young one between her feet and fly away
-with it.
-
-
-Instead of the common whip-poor-will of the Northern and Middle States,
-the South has the CHUCK-WILL'S-WIDOW, who is somewhat larger. The West
-has the POOR-WILL, or the NUTTALL'S WHIP-POOR-WILL, who is rather
-smaller and paler than either. The habits of all are about the same.
-They are called solitary birds. That is, they are not found in parties
-like swallows or crows. They do not sing or call when flying.
-
-These birds are hard to watch because they come out in the dark, and can
-then see so much better than we can. So we know little about their
-ways.
-
-
-The NIGHTHAWK'S looks, and all his ways, are different. He wears the
-same colors that the whip-poor-will does, but they are arranged in
-another way. They are put in bars running across the back and tail, and
-there is a great deal of white on his upper breast. On the wing is a
-large white spot that looks like a hole across it, when you see him
-flying away up in the air. You can always know him by this.
-
-[Illustration: NIGHTHAWK]
-
-Then he does not act like the whip-poor-will. He is a high flyer,
-sailing about over our heads in the afternoon or evening. He is not
-silent on the wing. Now and then he gives a strange sharp cry like
-"peent." He is busy catching flies and mosquitoes as he goes. Sometimes
-you will see him dive head first toward the earth as if he would dash
-himself against it. At the same time he makes a loud sound, like blowing
-into the bunghole of an empty barrel. But before he touches, he turns
-and skims along just above the ground.
-
-The mother nighthawk, like the whip-poor-will, makes no nest. She
-chooses a sunny spot in a pasture or on a hillside to put her eggs.
-Sometimes in the cities, where flies and other things to eat are so
-plentiful, she takes a flat house-roof for her nursery. Many pairs of
-down-covered baby night hawks are brought up over our heads, and we
-do not know it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The family name of Goatsuckers was given to the birds from the foolish
-notion that they took milk from the goats. By watching them, it has been
-found that when they are so busy around the goats or cattle, they are
-really catching the insects which torment them. So they are doing a
-kindness to the beasts, instead of an injury.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[22] See Appendix, 21.
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-THE WOODPECKER FAMILY
-
-(_Picidæ_)[23]
-
-
-YOU may generally know a woodpecker the moment you see him on a tree. He
-will--if he follows woodpecker fashions--be clinging to the trunk, or a
-big branch, propped up by his stiff tail, and not perched crosswise like
-most other birds.
-
-There are a good many of this family in the world. We have twenty-four
-species in North America. They differ from other birds in two or three
-ways. First their toes are always in pairs, two turned forward and two
-turned backward, except in one genus, which has but three toes. So they
-can hold on better than anybody else.
-
-Then again the tails of woodpeckers are not like most birds' tails. They
-are strong and stiff, so that they can be used as props to hold the bird
-in the queer position he likes so well.
-
-Oddest of all are the woodpecker tongues. They are round, worm-shaped it
-is called, and except in the genus of sapsuckers, very long. They can be
-pushed out far beyond the end of the beak. That is so that they can
-reach into a deep hole for the insects they eat. They have little barbs
-or sharp points on the tip, to catch their prey, and they are sticky
-besides. The tongue of the sapsucker has a brush at the end and is not
-barbed.
-
-One of the most notable things about a woodpecker is his bill, which he
-uses as a drill and also to drum with.
-
-Woodpeckers are made to take care of the large limbs and trunks of
-trees, to get out from under the bark the grubs which would kill them.
-They are perfectly fitted for the work.
-
-As you learn more about birds and beasts, you will see that every one is
-exactly fitted for his work in life. A worm is as well fitted to be a
-worm as a bird is to be a bird. How this came to be so has long been a
-study of the wise men, and they have not found out all about it yet.
-
-
-The largest of this family that is common is the GOLDEN-WINGED
-WOODPECKER, or FLICKER. He is as large as a pigeon. In the Eastern
-States is the golden-wing, in the West and California the red-shafted,
-who differs merely in the dress.
-
-The gold-winged woodpecker has a brown back with black bars, and a light
-breast with heavy black spots. His wings and tail are yellow on the
-inside. He has a bright red collar on the back of his neck, a heavy
-black crescent on his breast, and black cheek patches or bars running
-down from the corners of his mouth.
-
-The RED-SHAFTED FLICKER has red cheek patches instead of black, and
-omits the red collar altogether. His breast is a little grayer, and the
-wing and tail linings are scarlet. Both flickers have large white spots
-on the back, above the tail, which show very plainly when they fly.
-
-These two varieties of the flicker are found from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific. Their ways of living are the same, and what is said of one will
-do as well for the other.
-
-A flicker hangs himself up to sleep. He takes a good hold of a tree
-trunk, or upright limb, with his grapnel-shaped toes, presses his stiff
-tail against the bark, and hangs there all night. When he flies, he goes
-in great waves, as if he were galloping through the air.
-
-The nest of this woodpecker is a snug little room in a tree trunk, or
-sometimes a telegraph-pole. He usually selects a tree that is dead, or
-partly so, but sometimes he takes a solid one. The little room is cut
-out by the strong, sharp beaks of the pair. The door of this home is
-just a round hole rather high up on the trunk. A passage is cut straight
-in for a little way and then turns down, and there the room is made. It
-has to be of pretty good size, for the bird is fond of a large family.
-Five or six and occasionally more young flickers have been found in a
-nest.
-
-Fashions change in the bird world as well as in the human. Woodpeckers
-more than any others are changing their habits, and improving their
-condition. They have found an easier way to get a home than to chisel it
-out of wood. Nowadays woodpeckers often cut a hole through a board which
-admits them into a garret, a church tower, or the walls of an unused
-building, and make the nest there. Thus they save themselves much labor.
-One even cut out a home in a haystack.
-
-These birds have changed too, it is said, in their notions about eating.
-They do not think it necessary to dig out every mouthful from under tree
-bark. The flicker feeds on the ground. He eats many insects, but mostly
-ants. When insects are scarce, he eats many wild berries--dogwood, black
-alder, poke-berries, and others--and the seeds of weeds.
-
-Young woodpeckers in the nest are fed mostly upon insects. When they get
-big enough to climb up to the door of their snug home, they stick their
-heads out and call for something to eat. Then one can hardly pass
-through the woods without hearing them, for they have good loud voices.
-And of course they are always hungry.
-
-The way they are fed is by regurgitation. That is, the old bird swallows
-the food she gets, and when she wants to feed, she jerks it up again.
-She thrusts her bill far down the little one's throat, as I told you the
-hummingbird does. Then she gives three or four pokes as if she were
-hammering it down. A young flicker does not seem to know how to swallow.
-A lady once picked up a nestling who was hurt, and to get him to eat
-anything she had to poke it down his throat herself.
-
-The gold-winged woodpecker is a lively bird, most interesting to know.
-He makes so many strange noises that I can't tell you half of them, and
-his ways are as queer as his notes. He does not sing much, but he is a
-great drummer. When he finds a tin roof, or eaves gutter that pleases
-him, he will drum on it till he drives the family nearly crazy. He seems
-particularly to delight in waking them all up in the morning.
-
-He can sing, too. I have heard a flicker sing a droll little song, not
-very loud, swinging his body from side to side as he did it.
-
-Another thing this bird can do is dance. Two flickers will stand
-opposite one another and take funny little steps, forward and back, and
-sideways. Then they will touch their bills together and go through
-several graceful figures. This has been seen several times by persons
-whose truthfulness can be relied upon.
-
-
-The RED-HEADED WOODPECKER is another common one of the family,
-especially in the Middle States. He is a little smaller than the
-flicker. No one can mistake this bird, he is so plainly marked. His
-whole head is bright red. The rest of him is black, or bluish black,
-with a large mass of white on the body and wings.
-
-This woodpecker, too, has partly given up getting food from under the
-bark. He takes a good deal on the wing, like a flycatcher. Sometimes he
-goes to the ground for a large insect like a cricket or grasshopper, and
-he is fond of nuts, especially the little three-cornered beech-nut.
-
-The red-head is beginning to store food for winter use, for most
-woodpeckers do not migrate. When beech-nuts are ripe, he gets great
-quantities of them, and packs them away in queer places, where he can
-find them when he wants them.
-
-Some of his nuts the red-head puts in cavities in trees, others in
-knot-holes or under bark that is loose. Many he fits into cracks in the
-bark, and hammers in tight. He has been known to fill the cracks in a
-gate-post, and in railroad ties, and even to poke his nuts between the
-shingles on a roof. Any place where he can wedge a nut in he seems to
-think is a good one.
-
-[Illustration: DOWNY WOODPECKER]
-
-A woodpecker can eat almost anything. Besides insects and nuts, he likes
-wild berries of all kinds--dogwood, cedar, and others that he finds in
-the woods.
-
-The nest of the red-headed woodpecker is usually cut out in the dead top
-or limb of a tree. In prairie lands, where trees are scarce, he contents
-himself with telegraph-poles and fence-posts.
-
-This bird is rather a dainty feeder. He does not swallow his food
-wherever he finds it, as many birds do. He likes a regular dining-table.
-So he takes it to some place on top of a fence-post or an old stump,
-where he has found or made a little hollow. There he puts his nut or
-acorn, picks it to pieces, and eats it in bits.
-
-The young red-head is a good deal like his father, only his head is
-brown instead of red. A queer thing happened to a baby red-head in
-Indiana one summer. He was found on the ground, hopping about in a
-pitiful way, unable to fly. The parents and others of the woodpecker
-tribe were flying about him, much troubled, and trying to help him. But
-this young one had been hurt, or was not yet strong enough to get about.
-He acted as if he were half paralyzed, and he was wholly helpless. Once
-while the little bird was hobbling about and calling for something to
-eat, and no one was there to feed him, a robin happened to notice him.
-He took pity on the hungry baby, and brought him a nice worm, which he
-took very gladly.
-
-But still more strange was the way the family cat acted toward the
-little stranger. When she saw him on the ground, she started for him. No
-doubt she meant to catch him, for she was a great bird hunter. When she
-got almost up to the little fellow, she seemed suddenly to notice that
-he was a baby, and helpless. At once her manner changed. She went up to
-him, and actually played with him in the gentlest way, not hurting him
-in the least. She did this several times before the bird got strong
-enough to fly. This is a true story.
-
-
-The CALIFORNIAN WOODPECKER takes the place of the red-head in
-California. He is most interesting because of one habit which gives him
-the common name of "carpenter woodpecker." This habit is of storing
-sweet acorns for winter use.
-
-Other birds store acorns, but this bird has found out a new way. He
-drills a hole in the bark of a tree for each acorn by itself. It is
-generally a soft pine or cedar, and sometimes thousands of acorns are
-put in one tree. Often a trunk will be filled from near the ground up
-forty feet. The acorns are driven in point first, and so tightly that
-they have to be cut out with a knife. When a tree is filled, it is
-carefully guarded till they are needed.
-
-Many people think they lay up these acorns for the worms that sometimes
-come into them. But Mr. John Muir, who lives right there, and knows them
-as well as anybody in the world, says the birds eat the sound acorns
-themselves. Sometimes, when food is scarce, Indians go to these trees
-and steal the poor birds' store. They have to chop the acorns out with
-hatchets. They often take a bushel from one tree.
-
-These birds are more social than most woodpeckers. Often a party of them
-will be seen together. In his flight and his ways of eating this bird is
-like the red-headed woodpecker. Like him also, he is fond of clinging to
-a dead limb, and drumming, hours at a time.
-
-But in looks the Californian and the red-headed woodpeckers are very
-different. The Western bird has only a cap of bright red. His back is
-glossy blue-black, and he has the same color on the breast. His other
-under parts are white, and he has a white patch on the wings, and
-another just above the tail.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The smallest of our woodpeckers is the Downy Woodpecker, who is not much
-bigger than an English sparrow. The picture shows two of these birds. In
-"The First Book of Birds" there is a picture of a flicker at his
-nest-hole.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[23] See Appendix, 22.
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-THE KINGFISHER FAMILY
-
-(_Alcedinidæ_)[24]
-
-
-MOST of the Kingfisher family belong to the tropics, but we have one who
-is found all over the United States. This is the BELTED KINGFISHER.
-
-[Illustration: BELTED KINGFISHER]
-
-The belted kingfisher is large and rather chunky. He is dark blue above
-and white below, with a bluish band across the breast. He has a fine
-crest and a big head, and he sits up straight as a hawk.
-
-The tail of the kingfisher is short, and square at the end. His plumage
-is thick and oily, so that it does not hold wet. This is very important
-to him in the way he gets his food, for he is an expert fisherman. He
-lives alone, or with his mate, near the water,--a lake, or pond, or
-small stream.
-
-This bird's way of getting fish is to dive for them. You may have seen
-him splash into the water out of sight, and in a moment come up with
-a small fish in his beak. Then he goes back to his perch and beats the
-fish to death, before he swallows it. He swallows it whole and head
-first, because the fins might stick in his throat if he took it tail
-first. After a while he throws up a little ball of the bones, scales,
-and skin of the fish he has eaten. It is said that the kingfisher can
-take a very large fish. One was shot who had swallowed a fish so long
-that the tail stuck out of his mouth, and could not get down.
-
-The nest of the kingfisher is in the bank of a river or lake. The birds
-first cut a passage or hallway. Sometimes this is only four feet long,
-and straight. But when stones or roots are in the way, it will be much
-longer and have many turns. At the end of this passage is the kingfisher
-nursery. This is a round room nearly a foot across, with a roof rounded
-up over it. It is a little higher than the passageway so that water will
-not run into it.
-
-Sometimes it takes the birds two or three weeks to make one of these
-nests, as we might expect when we think they have only beaks and feet to
-work with. Usually it does not take so long. If the pair are not
-disturbed, they will use the same nest year after year. Sometimes the
-bed for the nestlings is of dry grass. One was found in which the bed
-was entirely of the bones and scales of fish.
-
-Mr. Baily has told us about a family of kingfisher little folk whom he
-studied and photographed. He dug down to the nest from above, and was
-careful not to hurt them and to put them back safely. First Mr. Baily
-took a picture of them when two days old. They were queer-looking
-objects, with eyes not open, and not a feather to their backs. They were
-not so young but that they had one notion in their little round heads.
-That was to cuddle up close together. They were not used to much room in
-their dark cradle.
-
-When Mr. Baily laid them out on the ground, they at once crawled up
-together and made themselves into a sort of ball. They put their bare
-wings and their bills over one another, and held on so that one could
-not be moved without the others. After they had sat for their picture
-they were carefully put back, and the nest was covered up again.
-
-When the nestlings were nine days old, the nest was opened again, and
-another picture taken. The little ones had grown a good deal in these
-few days. Their eyes were open, and they were fast getting their feather
-coats on. But they were just as fond of being close together as before.
-
-After this the birds were left in their home till they were twenty-three
-days old, and it seemed about time for them to come out. When the nest
-was opened this time, it was found that the family had moved. The old
-room was filled up with earth, and a new one made farther up. No doubt
-the old birds thought the man too curious about their babies. The young
-birds were ready to fly, and two of them did take to their wings when
-they came to daylight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a very old fable about the kingfisher, who was called the
-halcyon. It is told in the first book that was ever written about birds
-(so far as I know). The author was Aristotle, a Greek who lived three
-hundred years before Christ. The story is, that the bird builds a nest
-that floats on the sea, and for seven days before and seven days after
-the shortest winter day, the sea stays calm, so that the nest may not be
-hurt. During the first seven days she builds her nest, and in the second
-seven she hatches out the young. These fourteen days were called halcyon
-days. You may find more about this curious story in the encyclopædias.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[24] See Appendix, 23.
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-THE CUCKOO FAMILY
-
-(_Cuculidæ_)[25]
-
-
-MOST of the cuckoo family live in a hotter climate than ours, but we
-have a few of them. They are beautiful birds, with some peculiar ways.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO]
-
-Cuckoos are rather slim in form, with very long tails, and bills a
-little curved. Their toes are divided like woodpeckers' toes, two turned
-forward and two back. In the Eastern States we have but two, the
-yellow-billed and the black-billed. Best known in the East is the
-YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO, and in California the Western Yellow-billed, or
-California, Cuckoo.
-
-This bird has several names. In some places he is called the rain crow,
-and in other places the wood pigeon; but of course he is neither a crow
-nor a pigeon. He is a graceful bird, with plumage like satin. He is a
-soft brown above and white below, but he is so shy that he is not so
-often seen as heard. His call or song is a loud, yet not harsh
-"kuk-kuk-kuk" many times repeated. Sometimes it begins slow and grows
-faster till the notes run into each other, and then grows slow again,
-ending in a sort of "cow-cow-cow;" but it does not always do so.
-
-The cuckoo does not manage her nursery affairs as other birds do. Most
-birds lay an egg a day, or every other day, so that they hatch about the
-same time; but this bird doesn't mind if several days come between. Thus
-it happens that one or more little cuckoos hatch out before the rest are
-ready, and it is common to find little ones of several ages in the same
-nest. There may be one nearly grown, another just beginning to get
-feathers, and a third one not yet out of the egg.
-
-There is another droll thing that may be found in a cuckoo's nest. When
-the feathers begin to grow out on young birds, they come wrapped in
-little sheaths. In most cases these sheaths burst open and the feathers
-show, when they are a little way out. But in this family it is
-different. The sheath does not open, says Mr. Dugmore, till the feathers
-have grown their full length. Till that happens, the youngster looks as
-if he were stuck all over with white pins on his black body.
-
-You have heard, or read, that the cuckoo lays eggs in other birds'
-nests, and leaves her young to be brought up by others. Do not forget
-that the bird who does that is the European cuckoo--not ours. Our
-cuckoos build nests, though very poor ones, sometimes hardly more than a
-platform of sticks.
-
-This bird is useful to us, for he eats some of our most troublesome
-insects,--such as tent caterpillars, which few birds like to eat because
-they are so hairy, and other insects with spines that are poisonous, and
-so generally avoided.
-
-The cuckoo is graceful in flight. He goes swiftly, without noise, and
-seems to glide through the thickest foliage with ease.
-
-I once found a young bird tumbling about on the ground. He was trying to
-fly, but was not able to go much more than a foot at a time. He was
-giving strange calls, which were answered from the woods beside the road
-by a low tapping sound. I thought of course the little one was a
-woodpecker and his mother was doing the knocking. It was so dark I could
-not see him well. After some trouble I caught him and was going to take
-a good look at him to see who he was before I let him go. As I grasped
-him he gave a shriek, and out from the thick trees popped a cuckoo. She
-alighted on a low branch outside and gave such a cry of distress that I
-knew at once it was her baby I held in my hand.
-
-I suppose the poor mother thought I wanted to carry the youngster off. I
-couldn't bear to have a bird think that for a minute; so I opened my
-hands and away he went, half flying, half scrambling up the road, while
-the mother slipped back into the woods. In a moment she began again her
-hollow-sounding calls, which I had thought were woodpecker tappings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[25] See Appendix, 24.
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-THE OWL FAMILY
-
-(_Bubonidæ_)[26]
-
-
-OWLS differ from all other birds in having eyes that look forward like
-ours. They have also a broad face, which is made to look even wider by
-the feathers which stand out around the eyes.
-
-Owls cannot turn their eyes in the sockets, so they have to turn the
-whole head to see to one side. Many of them have tufts of feathers like
-horns, which they can stand up or lay down as they choose. These are
-called horned owls. An owl's legs are covered with feathers, sometimes
-down to the toes. The whole plumage of this bird is soft and fluffy, so
-that he can fly without making any noise. This is important to him, for
-he lives mostly on mice, and he never could catch one if he made much
-noise getting about.
-
-The owl's mate looks like him, and--what is unusual among birds--she is
-larger than he. Because they come out in the evening, when we cannot
-see them well, we know very little of their ways. They are more often
-heard than seen. Their voices are generally mournful, but that is no
-reason why they should be feared.
-
-All birds have control over some of their feathers, that is, they can
-make them stand up or lie down as they choose. But owls have more than
-any other bird. An owl can alter his shape or size so that he will look
-like another bird.
-
-Mr. Bolles says that a large owl can change from a mass of bristling
-feathers a yard wide, to a slim, sleek brown post only a few inches
-wide. When he does this, one cannot see him, though he may be in plain
-sight. His colors blend with a tree trunk, or stump, and he can stand
-without stirring for an hour, and likes to do it.
-
-Mr. Bolles had owls in the house, and watched them closely. He has told
-us some curious things about their ways. He says that when one steps
-daintily across the floor, his feathers tuck themselves up as a lady
-holds up her gown.
-
-This moving of the feathers sometimes looks very droll. When eating, the
-feathers around the mouth, which might get soiled, draw back out of the
-way. And when an owl wants to hide his food, he stands over it, and the
-feathers droop down like a curtain to screen it from view. When Mrs.
-Bolles wanted to sketch an owl, he kept changing his shape all the time,
-though he did not seem to move at all.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Another man who had a pet owl says that the bird would stand before him
-and throw back his breast feathers each side, just as a man throws open
-his coat.
-
-The owlets come out of the egg dressed in soft, fluffy down. In some of
-the family it is gray, in others it is snowy white. They are carefully
-fed and reared by their loving parents.
-
-A funny story is told by a man who wanted to see what was in an owl's
-nest. He lifted the mother bird out, and to his surprise the whole
-family came out with her. She held on to one little one, and each one
-held on to the next, and so he had the whole owl family in a cluster,
-like a bunch of grapes.
-
-
-The SCREECH OWL is the best known of this family. He is found, under
-slightly different forms, all over our country. In Florida he is smaller
-and darker than in the Middle States. In California he is larger and
-grayer, and in the Rocky Mountains somewhat lighter. But he acts in
-about the same way, wherever he lives.
-
-In the East the screech owl is found in two colors. Some have reddish
-feathers, others have gray. The wise men have not yet found any
-reason for this difference.
-
-The screech owl is badly named, for his song is not a screech. It is a
-sort of trembling sound, and in some places he is called the "shivering
-owl," which is a much better name for him than screech owl. If one does
-not know who makes it, it is rather a weird song in the dark; but if one
-knows the pretty gray bird, it is sweet and pleasing.
-
-The bird comes out before it is quite pitch dark. He may often be seen
-against the sky, standing on a branch, bowing and swaying back and
-forth, while he utters strange notes of many kinds. He has plenty to say
-for himself. But you must keep as still as a mouse if you want to see
-him. If he can see to catch a mouse in the dark, you may be sure he can
-see you.
-
-Generally the screech owl makes a nest in a hollow tree or a deserted
-woodpecker nest, and comes out only at night. What he likes best to eat
-is mice, and mice too come out at night. The way he eats is curious, as
-I told you in "The First Book of Birds."
-
-A few years ago a screech owl went through a broken window into the
-attic of a house in New Jersey, and lived there all winter. The family
-were bird-lovers, so they let her stay. She liked it so well that the
-next spring she made her nest there and hatched out three little owls.
-The little ones were not at all afraid of people, and a son of the
-family made many photographs of them.
-
-After the owlets were grown, the whole family disappeared, and lived out
-of doors the rest of the summer. But when cold weather came, the old
-birds came back and stayed all winter again. They have made their home
-in that attic, and reared a brood every spring since. They are always
-very social among themselves. They talk and sing, and make many sorts of
-noises.
-
-
-One of the queerest of the owl family is the little BURROWING OWL of the
-West. The Florida Burrowing Owl, found in Florida, differs only a little
-from the Western bird. The burrowing owl is a comical-looking fellow,
-only about as large as a robin. He has very long legs for an owl, and is
-dressed in grayish brown.
-
-This bird is said to have very polite manners. In some places he is
-called the "how-do-you-do owl." He is always bowing, and turning from
-side to side, and seems to be greeting you as you come near him.
-
-The burrowing owl likes a comfortable home underground, out of the way
-of enemies. In the West, where he lives, prairie dogs are plentiful,
-and they are always digging out passages and rooms, more than they can
-use. So the owl has no trouble in finding empty quarters to live in.
-
-But in California, and places where are none of the digging dogs, the
-little owl rooms with some of the ground squirrels that burrow there. He
-must have an underground home in that land where trees are scarce, and
-he has no fancy for digging. Even if he wanted to dig, his feet are not
-fitted for it like the feet of the little beasts.
-
-The burrowing owl has no trouble in taking a house where he finds one to
-suit him, for he's a savage little fellow. He can kill squirrels and
-prairie dogs much bigger than himself, and even rattlesnakes, which take
-lodgings in the prairie dog houses also. He feeds upon all these
-creatures. He eats also crickets, scorpions, and many troublesome
-insects. This makes him valuable to farmers, for nearly all these
-creatures destroy his crops.
-
-Remember, too, that birds have great appetites; as I have told you, they
-eat more than their own weight every day. In that way they dispose of
-enormous numbers of pests. It almost seems as if a bird were a sort of
-eating machine, made on purpose to work for us. We should never forget
-this.
-
-This bird, like most others, makes many different sounds. His song is a
-soft "coo-oo," something like that of a mourning dove. When a stranger
-comes to his home and he is there, he gives a rattle which sounds like a
-rattlesnake. This scares people, and perhaps animals, away, for no one
-wants to meet a rattlesnake in a dark hole. I wonder if the bird learned
-this trick living in the same house with the snake.
-
-The Department of Agriculture has proved owls to be among the most
-useful of birds. Their food is almost entirely of hurtful creatures, and
-they come out at night when other birds are asleep and are ready to hunt
-the pests which do the same.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[26] See Appendix, 25.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-THE BARN OWL FAMILY
-
-(_Strigidæ_)[27]
-
-
-THIS is a small family of which we have but one member in America, the
-AMERICAN BARN OWL. He is found all over the country, as far north as
-southern New England, but he is one of the shyest of birds. He comes out
-only at night, and hides so well in the day that he is not often seen,
-even where he is common. So very little is known of his ways.
-
-When he does happen to come out, and any one sees him, a great deal is
-said about him. For he is a very odd-looking fellow indeed. He is all in
-gray and white, clouded and speckled and barred, and his face is the
-strangest of bird faces. It is three-cornered, and looks more like a
-monkey's than a bird's. If he shows this face in the daylight, he is
-generally caught or shot, and the newspapers make a great fuss about
-him. Some one says he looks like a toothless little old woman, with a
-hooked nose.
-
-Happily for the barn owl, he does not often come out. He loves quiet
-more than anything. He seeks a hidden, safe place, not only for a nest,
-but to spend his days in. He is almost the only bird who may be said to
-live in a home.
-
-When house hunting, this bird will take a snug cavity in a tree, or an
-empty building. He does not despise an old mining shaft, or a burrow in
-the ground. He delights in a church steeple or a barn. Almost any place
-that is quiet and out of sight of the world will suit him.
-
-All day the barn owl stays at home. But in the evening he comes out for
-his dinner, and then there is havoc among the small animals. Rats,
-ground squirrels, mice, bats, small snakes, grasshoppers, and almost
-anything else that is eatable are welcome to him. He should be protected
-because he is so useful.
-
-This bird is an amiable fellow too. He has been known to live pleasantly
-in a church tower with pigeons, whom he could easily kill to eat if he
-wished. He is a hearty eater himself, besides feeding a family of five
-or six little fuzzy white owlets great quantities of food.
-
-One of these owls has lived for years in a tower of the Smithsonian
-Institution in Washington. In the Zoölogical Collection of that city,
-there was, not long ago, another of the family alive. Wishing to have
-more of them in the Zoo, some one watched the nest of the tower bird.
-When her little family of seven was about ready to fly, he took them
-away, and gave them to their caged relative. She promptly adopted the
-whole party, and reared them with the greatest care. No doubt she was
-glad to have something to do. Life in a cage must be very tiresome for
-wild birds and beasts.
-
-Mr. Reed of Philadelphia has told us how a pet barn owl threw up the
-castings. These, you know, are the bones and skin of mice and other
-creatures which are thrown up awhile after eating. He would bow his head
-and shake it very hard. Then raise it and jerk out the little ball.
-
-This bird was very tame. The place where he liked best to sit was on the
-arm or shoulder of his master. If the man wanted to do anything except
-play with him, he had to get a stuffed bird to amuse the living one. It
-was like a doll for a baby girl. When the owl was not perfectly
-comfortable, he kept up a constant cry, so his master had to keep him
-well entertained and fed.
-
-The note of the barn owl is a wild screech. One is sometimes heard
-making this sound, but he is never heard flying, for, like other owls,
-he is dressed in soft feathers that make no rustle.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[27] See Appendix, 26.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-THE HAWK AND EAGLE FAMILY
-
-(_Falconidæ_)[28]
-
-
-THIS is a family of birds of prey. That is, birds who live entirely on
-living animals, which they hunt and catch for themselves. Owls are also
-birds of prey, but they do their hunting by night, while this family
-work by day.
-
-[Illustration: SPARROW HAWK]
-
-Like all birds, hawks are well fitted for what they have to do. They
-have long wings, so that they can fly swiftly and long at a time, to
-follow up the prey. They have sharp, curved claws, made for grasping and
-holding things. Their hooked beak is the best kind for cutting and
-tearing meat.
-
-Most of these birds work for us the whole time, as do the owls. For they
-eat the same destructive animals, and they eat an enormous number. Yet
-we have a foolish prejudice against them, because two or three of them
-sometimes take poultry and game birds. Even when these birds do take
-our poultry and game birds, some good is done. For they naturally catch
-the weak ones who are not able to get out of their way. And it is better
-for the whole race of these birds that the weak ones should not live. It
-leaves the rest stronger, and better able to make their way in the
-world.
-
-This family is found all over the world. It includes birds of all sizes,
-from one as small as a sparrow to one who spreads his wings ten feet. In
-our country we have neither the smallest nor the largest. Of those you
-are likely to see, the least is the American Sparrow Hawk, who is not
-much larger than a robin, and the greatest is the Bald Eagle, who is
-sometimes a yard from the tip of his beak to the end of his tail.
-
-Hawks have wonderful eyes like a telescope and microscope in one, as I
-have told you in "The First Book of Birds." In eating without knife and
-fork, they often swallow food whole and throw up castings like the owls.
-
-In catching their prey these birds use their feet instead of their
-beaks. Even those who hunt grasshoppers and crickets seize them in their
-claws. Their feet are quite as useful as hands. In them they carry
-material for the nest as well as food for the little ones. The claws are
-powerful weapons of war, too. A hawk who is ready to fight throws
-himself on his back and presents his claws to the enemy. Few people
-would like to be grappled by those terrible claws.
-
-Hawks and eagles have wonderful wing power. Some of them can stay far up
-in the air an hour at a time. They go up in great circles with wings
-held stiffly out and not beating, till out of sight. Men have not yet
-been able to see quite how it is done. It is probably by using the wings
-as sailors use their sails, and making the wind carry them.
-
-
-The one of this family I shall tell you about is the FISH HAWK, or
-AMERICAN OSPREY, because he is found all over the United States. He is
-one of those which you will be most likely to see, and want to know
-about.
-
-The osprey is a large bird, about two feet long. He is dressed in
-chocolate brown, with white breast and white tips to many of his
-feathers. His head feathers are long, and lie back on his neck, giving a
-peculiar shape to the head, by which you may know him at once. These
-feathers too are white, so that as he flies over he looks as if he were
-bald. He has feet marvelously fitted to hold slippery fish. The talons
-are sharp, and the toes long, and rough on the under side, so that
-nothing can get away from them.
-
-The fish hawk is a social bird and fond of his home. Though he migrates,
-he comes back to the old place, year after year. He likes the top of a
-stout tree to build in. It needs to be stout, for he makes a very big
-nest, and adds to it every season. It generally kills the tree, if it is
-not dead when he begins. If there are no trees to be had, or if there
-are too many birds for the trees at hand, some of them will nest on the
-ground, for they like to keep near their friends. The nest is made of
-sticks and all the rubbish the birds can collect. Such things are found
-as an old broom, a boy's sail-boat, a rag doll, and others as absurd.
-
-The young fish hawk is a pretty little fellow in white down. He is three
-or four weeks in the egg, and a long time in the nest, and is helpless a
-good deal longer. He is fed on fish like his parents. For this bird
-deserves his name; he is a fisherman, and always takes his food from the
-water. Fortunately he usually selects the poorer kinds of fish, which
-men do not care to eat, and so he is not called an enemy by the
-fishermen.
-
-But the hard-working osprey has an enemy, who makes it his business to
-rob him. The way the fish hawk gets his food is to dive for it. He
-hovers over the water till he sees a fish near the surface that suits
-him. Then he closes his wings and dives like a shot. He plunges in often
-over his head, and seizes the fish in his claws or talons. Then he
-rises, and shaking off the water flies toward his family, with their
-dinner.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN OSPREY OR FISH HAWK]
-
-But then appears the robber, the bald eagle, I'm sorry to say, who
-prefers stealing his food to hunting for himself. He rushes furiously at
-the fish hawk, who is obliged to drop his load to defend himself. Then
-the eagle seizes it, often before it reaches the ground, and flies off,
-while the osprey goes back to his fishing.
-
-But the osprey is learning something, like the rest of the birds. On the
-shore of New Jersey there is a place where men fish with great nets, and
-bring in hundreds of fish every day. The birds have noted how much
-better men are at their trade of fishing than they are. So they have
-thought out an easier way to get food than to dive for it. Perhaps they
-got the hint from the eagle.
-
-Wherever the fish hawks got the idea, it is now the common custom for
-them to sit on the poles that hold the net and wait. When it is drawn up
-filled with flopping fish, each bird dives down and secures one for
-himself. And he takes time to choose, too. If there is one of a kind
-he particularly likes, he goes for that one.
-
-Fish hawks, like other birds, are very fond of their little ones. A
-gentleman who had been traveling in the West told me this little story.
-He, with a party who were wandering over a wild part of the country,
-accidentally set fire to a bit of woods on the shore of Lake Superior.
-On one of the trees was a fish hawk's nest with young birds. As soon as
-the smoke began to spread, the old birds grew uneasy, and circled about
-their tree, going often to the nest.
-
-The men who had done the mischief, and who had then taken to their boat,
-were noting the spread of the fire. They watched the birds to see what
-they would do. When the fire at last reached their tree, the loving
-parents turned with one accord, plunged down into the nest, and all
-perished together. They could easily have saved themselves, but they
-could not desert their nestlings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[28] See Appendix, 27.
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-THE SCAVENGER FAMILY
-
-(_Cathartidæ_)[29]
-
-
-THIS is one of the most useful of bird families. But it is not very
-pleasant to meet, for the work it has to do makes it rather repulsive to
-us.
-
-The vultures are scavengers. They dispose of vast quantities of carrion
-and other offensive matter. In doing this they make it possible for
-people to live in places where they could not live without the service
-of these birds.
-
-
-The common vulture in the United States is the TURKEY VULTURE, or TURKEY
-BUZZARD. He is a large bird, with head and neck bare of feathers. In
-shape and size he is a good deal like a turkey. He is a familiar bird
-all over the country, except in New England and other northern parts,
-and is usually seen soaring about in the air, looking for food.
-Beautiful and graceful he looks away up against the sky. He sails
-around as if he weighed nothing, with wing feathers spread at the tip
-like fingers. But he is not so pretty when he comes to the ground, for
-he is very clumsy and awkward in getting about.
-
-The turkey buzzard nests almost anywhere; he is not at all
-particular--on the ground, in a hollow stump, or tree. The young are
-comfortably dressed in white down, but they are not pretty. They are as
-awkward as their parents, and have a way of hanging their heads as if
-they were ashamed of themselves. That is not the reason, however; their
-work is something we could not do without. It is because they are too
-weak to hold themselves up.
-
-I once saw a funny sight. A party of eighteen or twenty great buzzards
-had come to the ground to get their dinner. They were all very busily
-engaged just the other side of a fence, so that I could not see them at
-their feast.
-
-Suddenly a mockingbird that I was watching flew over and alighted on the
-fence. He stood there a minute, looking sharply down at them, and
-flirting his tail in a saucy way. All at once, to my great surprise, he
-gave a loud cry and flung himself down right among the great birds.
-
-I was frightened. I thought one peck from one of their strong beaks
-would kill the little fellow. But instead of that, the whole party of
-buzzards flew up in a panic, as if they were afraid of him. Then the
-mockingbird, who looked like a midget beside them, hopped back upon the
-fence, and burst into a loud song of victory. He knew the turkey buzzard
-better than I did. No one likes to get very near this bird, so very
-little is known about his ways.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[29] See Appendix, 28.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX
-
-CHARACTERS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN REPRESENTATIVES OF THE FAMILIES
-MENTIONED IN THIS BOOK
-
-
- NOTE.--_These characters, though correct, are
- untechnically given, and are such as may be observed
- on the "bird in the bush" while the added hints on
- habits, etc., will be found helpful in
- identification._
-
-
-1. Turdidæ: THRUSHES.
-
-Medium size; bill shorter than head, straight or nearly so; bristles
-(hair-like feathers) at corner of mouth; wings rather pointed, and
-longer than tail; tail-feathers wider towards the end, the whole
-somewhat fan-shaped. Young in first feathers speckled and streaked, very
-different from the adults. Sexes nearly alike (except robin, varied
-thrush, and bluebird). (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects, earthworms, and sometimes fruit.
-
-These birds are all singers and build rude nests. Found usually on the
-lower part of trees in the woods (except robin and bluebird) or on the
-ground, where they get most of their food.
-
-
-2. Sylviidæ: KINGLETS and GNATCATCHERS.
-
-This family is divided into two subfamilies.
-
-KINGLETS: Very small; bill slender, much shorter than head, straight to
-near tip, then slightly curved; bristles at corner of mouth; wings
-longer than tail; tail slightly forked, feathers pointed; legs long;
-claws much curved. Young without markings on head. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects.
-
-Very small, active, musical birds, usually found flitting about in
-trees.
-
-GNATCATCHERS: Very small and slim; bill slender and short, nearly as
-long as head, notched at tip; bristles at corner of mouth; wings shorter
-than tail and rounded; tail long and moderately graduated, feathers
-rounded; legs rather long; toes small. (Ridgway.)
-
-Active, beautiful nest builders, found in the tops of trees.
-Insectivorous.
-
-
-3. Paridæ: NUTHATCHES, TITMICE, etc.
-
-This family is divided into three subfamilies.
-
-NUTHATCHES: Smaller than English sparrow; bill sharp, pointed, higher
-than wide, about as long as head; bristles over nostrils; wings pointed;
-tail very short, nearly even, feathers soft; legs stout. (Ridgway.)
-
-Parents nearly alike; food, insects.
-
-Found on the trunks and large limbs of trees.
-
-TITMICE: Usually smaller than English sparrow; bill stout, conical,
-shorter than head; nasal feathers turned forward; tail longer than wing.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Parents alike, and young the same. No noticeable change
-of plumage with season.
-
-WREN-TITS and BUSH-TITS: Very small; bill short and conical; tail
-rounded. Sexes alike.
-
-
-4. Certhiidæ: CREEPERS.
-
-Smaller than English sparrow; bill slender and curved downward; wings
-rather pointed, long as tail; tail graduated, stiff, with long,
-sharp-pointed feathers; claws long and strongly curved. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes alike, and young the same. Found circling tree
-trunks.
-
-
-5. Troglodytidæ: WRENS and MOCKING THRUSHES.
-
-This family is divided into two subfamilies.
-
-WRENS: Smaller than English sparrow; bill slender, sometimes long and
-arched; no bristles at corner of mouth; wings rounded; tail usually held
-up. (Ridgway.)
-
-Parents and young alike. Food: insects. Singers. Found near the ground.
-
-MOCKING THRUSHES: Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, mostly
-rather long; bristles at corner of mouth; wings rounded; tail longer
-than wings; appear like thrushes; fine singers. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes nearly alike. Food, insects and fruit. Some of them found in bushy
-borders of woods, some about gardens and houses, and others in various
-places.
-
-
-6. Cinclidæ: DIPPERS.
-
-Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, shorter than head; wings
-short, stiff and rounded; tail shorter than wings, soft and square;
-claws strongly curved; plumage soft and compact; body stout, thickset.
-Sexes alike. (Coues.)
-
-Food: water insects and larvæ. Found in and about the brooks of the
-Rocky Mountains and other mountains of the West.
-
-
-7. Motacillidæ: WAGTAILS and PIPITS.
-
-Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, cone shaped, nearly as high
-as wide, at base; short bristles at corner of mouth; wings rather long
-and pointed; tail narrow and slightly forked; legs rather long; hind
-claw very long, sharp and slightly curved. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes alike. Food: insects. Found on the ground, where they walk, and
-wag their tails.
-
-
-8. Mniotiltidæ: WARBLERS.
-
-It is almost impossible to characterize this family, there are so many
-varieties. With few exceptions they are very small and beautifully
-colored birds, sexes unlike, and changes of plumage with age and season.
-Some are found in the tops of trees, some on bushes, and some on the
-ground. Food: insects. (Coues.)
-
-
-9. Vireonidæ: VIREOS.
-
-Generally smaller than an English sparrow, and more slender; bill
-notched in both mandibles; tail rather short, nearly even, of narrow
-feathers; front toes more or less united. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Constant singers. Sexes alike and young the same, without
-spots or streaks. Some found in trees in the woods, and others about
-towns where English sparrows are not too numerous.
-
-
-10. Laniidæ: SHRIKES.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill powerful, tip hooked and notched;
-wings short, rounded; tail long and much graduated. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects, small mammals, and sometimes birds. Sexes alike, and
-young the same. Found on outside of low trees, fences, telegraph wires,
-and peaks of roofs.
-
-
-11. Ampelidæ: WAXWINGS, etc.
-
-Somewhat larger than an English sparrow; bill short, broad and rather
-flat; head with pointed crest; wings long and pointed; tail short,
-narrow, even; legs of moderate length. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects and fruit. Sexes usually alike. Found in trees in woods
-and in shade and orchard trees.
-
-
-12. Hirundinidæ: SWALLOWS.
-
-About the size of an English, sparrow; bill short, flat, and very broad
-at the head; mouth opens back nearly to the eyes; wings long and scythe
-shaped; tail forked; legs short; feet weak; plumage compact and usually
-lustrous. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes usually alike, and young a little different. Found
-in flocks, in the air, on roofs or fences or telegraph wires, sometimes
-on trees.
-
-
-13. Tanagridæ: TANAGERS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill conical, notched, bristles; wings
-longer than tail; tail of moderate length, somewhat notched; legs rather
-short. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes unlike. Found on trees in the woods.
-
-
-14. Fringillidæ: FINCHES.
-
-Mostly about the size of an English sparrow, some smaller, some larger;
-bill short, high, and strong, turned down at the back corner; wings and
-tail variable. (Ridgway.)
-
-Seed and insect eaters. Found everywhere--on trees, bushes, on ground,
-in woods, fields, and about houses.
-
-
-15. Icteridæ: BLACKBIRDS, ORIOLES, etc.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill straight or gently curved; mouth
-turned down at corners; tail rather long and rounded; legs rather short.
-Includes birds of very different habits. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: seeds and insects. Sexes generally unlike. Found everywhere, on
-trees, in marshes, in woods. Many gregarious, found in flocks, some
-except in nesting season, and others all the year round.
-
-
-16. Corvidæ: CROWS and JAYS.
-
-Larger than a robin. There are two subfamilies.
-
-CROWS: Bill longer than head; wings long and pointed; tail rather short
-and even.
-
-JAYS: Bill shorter than head; wings short and rounded. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: almost everything--seeds, fruit, sometimes eggs and young birds.
-Found in woody places.
-
-
-17. Alaudidæ: LARKS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill short, conical, frontal feathers
-extend along the side; wings pointed; claw on hind toe very long and
-nearly straight. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes nearly alike. Found on ground in fields and roads.
-
-
-18. Tyrannidæ: FLYCATCHERS.
-
-Mostly larger than an English sparrow; bill broad, flattened, curved
-downward at end, and notched at tip; bristles along the gape; wings and
-tail variable. (Ridgway.)
-
-Entirely insectivorous. Found in woods and fields and about houses.
-
-
-19. Trochilidæ: HUMMINGBIRDS.
-
-Our smallest birds; bill slender, sharp, and straight, usually longer
-than head; wings long and pointed; legs short; feet small and weak;
-claws curved and sharp. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: tiny insects and the honey of flowers. Sexes unlike. Found about
-flowers.
-
-
-20. Micropodidæ: SWIFTS.
-
-About the size of an English sparrow; bill very small, triangular, much
-broader than high, without bristles; wings long and pointed; legs short;
-feet weak; tail very short, ending in stiff spines; plumage compact.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Food: entirely insects. Sexes alike. Found in the air or inside chimneys
-or hollow trees.
-
-
-21. Caprimulgidæ: GOATSUCKERS.
-
-Larger than a robin; bill very short; gape enormously long and wide;
-mouth open to behind the eyes; wings long; plumage soft. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes nearly alike. One species found in the edge of
-woods, and another species about towns.
-
-
-22. Picidæ: WOODPECKERS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill usually straight, pointed or
-chisel-shaped at tip; tongue extensile and except in one species barbed
-at point; tail stiff and feathers pointed at tip for a prop; toes,
-except in three-toed species, two forward and two backward for climbing.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Insectivorous. Sexes unlike. Found on trees (except one species) in
-woods or orchards.
-
-
-23. Alcedinidæ: KINGFISHERS.
-
-Usually larger than a robin; bill long and straight; tongue small; head
-large, crested; wings short; legs small; outer and middle toe united
-half their length. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: fishes. Sexes slightly unlike. Found by water.
-
-
-24. Cuculidæ: CUCKOOS.
-
-Larger than a robin; bill narrow and high, rather long and curved
-downward; wings long; tail long, soft, and rounded; toes in pairs.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Insectivorous. Sexes alike. Found on trees.
-
-
-25. Bubonidæ: OWLS.
-
-Mostly larger than a robin, a few smaller; bill hooked; eyes directed
-forward and surrounded by radiating feathers; plumage soft and lax;
-feathers beside forehead often stand up like ear tufts; legs usually
-feathered; feet sometimes feathered. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes alike. Flesh eaters. Usually nocturnal. Most species found in
-holes in trees or old buildings.
-
-
-26. Strigidæ: BARN OWLS.
-
-Much larger than a robin; bill hooked; eyes very small;
-triangular-shaped eye disk; tail emarginate; claws sharp and strong;
-very downy plumage. (Ridgway).
-
-Food: mice and other small mammals. Sexes alike. Exclusively nocturnal.
-Found in barns and deserted buildings.
-
-
-27. Falconidæ: HAWKS AND EAGLES.
-
-(There are several subfamilies.)
-
-Mostly very large birds; bill strongly hooked; eyes directed sideways;
-eyelids with lashes; toes never feathered. (Ridgway.)
-
-Carnivorous and insectivorous. Sexes usually alike, but female larger.
-
-
-28. Cathartidæ: AMERICAN VULTURES.
-
-Large as a turkey, one species much larger; whole head and sometimes
-neck bare of feathers; eyes prominent; tail rounded. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: carrion. Found sailing about in the air.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-References to the FIRST BOOK are indicated by ~1~; those to the SECOND
-BOOK by ~2~.
-
- Affections, ~1~, 78-82.
-
- Air-sacs, ~1~, 92, 94.
-
- Alaudidæ, ~2~, 131, 202.
-
- Alcedinidæ, ~2~, 170, 203.
-
- Ampelidæ, ~2~, 63, 200.
-
- Arrival in spring, ~1~, 3, 4.
-
- Attraction and Protection of Birds, ~1~, 131-135.
-
- Audubon, John James, ~1~, 60.
-
- Auks, ~1~, 110.
-
-
- Barn Owl Family, ~2~, 185, 204.
-
- Beak, ~1~, 95-97.
-
- Blackbird, Brewer's, ~2~, 113.
-
- Blackbird, Crow, ~1~, 72; ~2~, 110.
-
- Blackbird, Red-winged, ~2~, 94;
- portrait, ~2~, 94.
-
- Blackbird Family, ~2~, 94, 201.
-
- Blackbirds, ~1~, 3, 126, 129.
-
- Bluebird, arrival, ~1~, 3;
- getting food for young, 17;
- teaching young to fly, 37, 38;
- feeding, 50; ~2~, 5;
- portrait, ~1~, 38.
-
- Bobolink, nest of, ~1~, 9;
- one of the first birds to stop singing in summer, 47;
- the fall migration, 61, 62.
-
- Bob-white (quail), ~1~, 44, 59.
-
- Body, shape of, ~1~, 91.
-
- Bolles, Frank, his pet owl, ~1~, 101, 116;
- his story of a heron, 103, 104.
-
- Bones, ~1~, 92, 94.
-
- Books about birds, ~1~, 142-144.
-
- Brooding, ~1~, 13-16.
-
- Bubonidæ, ~2~, 178, 204.
-
- Bunting, Towhee, _or_ Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Bush-Tits, ~2~, 198.
-
- Butcher-birds, ~2~, 59.
-
- Buzzard, Turkey, ~1~, 50, 51; ~2~, 194.
-
-
- Canary, ~1~, 20, 57, 81.
-
- Caprimulgidæ, ~2~, 155, 203.
-
- Cardinal, ~1~, 69, 132; ~2~, 88;
- portrait, ~2~, 90.
-
- Catbird, food of, ~1~, 49, 126;
- jerking the tail, 113; ~2~, 37, 125;
- portrait, ~2~, 36.
-
- Cathartidæ, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
- Cave-dwelling Family, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Cedar-bird, feeding young, ~1~, 19;
- story of affection for young, 78;
- usefulness to man, 126, 129; ~2~, 63;
- portrait, ~1~, 126.
-
- Certhiidæ, ~2~, 27, 198.
-
- Chat, Long-tailed, ~2~, 53.
-
- Chat, Yellow-breasted, ~2~, 52;
- portrait, ~2~, 52.
-
- Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Chickadee, defending eggs, ~1~, 11, 12;
- getting food for young, 18;
- as an eater of insects' eggs, 68, 126;
- affection for young, 78; ~2~, 22;
- portrait, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chickadee, Mountain, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chickadees, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chuck-will's-widow, ~2~, 157.
-
- Cinclidæ, ~2~, 42, 199.
-
- Color in feathers, ~1~, 120.
- _See also_ Plumage.
-
- Cormorant, ~1~, 94.
-
- Corvidæ, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
- Cowbird, ~2~, 51, 98.
-
- Creeper, Brown, ~2~, 27;
- portrait, ~2~, 28.
-
- Creeper Family, ~2~, 27, 198.
-
- Creepers, ~2~, 19.
-
- Crop, ~1~, 93.
-
- Crossbill, American _or_ Red, ~2~, 91.
-
- Crossbill, White-winged, ~2~, 92.
-
- Crossbills, ~1~, 97; ~2~, 91.
-
- Crow, American, punishing a young one, ~1~, 37;
- sleeping in flocks, 59, 60;
- story of an affectionate, 80;
- usefulness to men, 126; ~2~, 40, 117.
-
- Crow Family, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
- Cuckoo, Black-billed, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo, California, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo, Yellow-billed, ~2~, 174;
- portrait, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo Family, ~2~, 174, 203.
-
- Cuculidæ, ~2~, 174, 203.
-
-
- Dipper, American, ~2~, 42;
- portrait, ~2~, 42.
-
- Dipper Family, ~2~, 42, 199.
-
- Down, the first plumage, ~1~, 15, 21, 22, 115.
-
- Ducks, ~1~, 97, 115.
-
-
- Eagle, Bald, ~2~, 189, 192.
-
- Ears, ~1~, 102-104.
-
- Eggs, beauty of, ~1~, 11;
- the mother's care, 11, 12;
- incubation and hatching of, 13-15.
-
- Eyes, ~1~, 100-102.
-
-
- Falconidæ, ~2~, 188, 204.
-
- Feathers, first appearance on the young bird, ~1~, 22;
- of the wing, 109-111;
- of the tail, 112, 113;
- the various kinds of, 114, 115;
- expression of emotions by, 116;
- the birds' care of, 116, 117.
- _See also_ Plumage.
-
- Feet, ~1~, 92, 105-108.
-
- Finches, ~2~, 82, 201.
-
- Fish, birds and dead, ~1~, 86, 87.
-
- Flicker, method of feeding young, ~1~, 18;
- food of, 85, 127;
- color markings, 121; ~2~, 161;
- portrait, ~1~, 86.
-
- Flicker, Red-shafted, ~2~, 161, 162.
-
- Flycatcher, Least, ~2~, 136.
-
- Flycatcher, Shining Crested, ~2~, 67.
-
- Flycatching Family, ~2~, 135, 202.
-
- Flying, ~1~, 93.
-
- Food, ~1~, 48-55;
- in winter, 67-69, 134;
- in its relation to the welfare of man, 125-130.
-
- Frigate-bird, ~1~, 110.
-
- Fringillidæ, ~2~, 80, 201.
-
-
- Geese, ~1~, 98, 99.
-
- Gizzard, ~1~, 93.
-
- Gnatcatcher, Blue-gray, ~2~, 16.
-
- Gnatcatchers, ~2~, 198.
-
- Goatsucker Family, ~2~, 155, 203.
-
- Goldfinch, American, ~1~, 14;
- story of canary and, 20;
- change of color, 26;
- food, 54;
- flocking, 71; ~2~, 82;
- portrait, ~1~, 26.
-
- Goldfinch, European, ~1~, 79.
-
- Goldfinch, Willow, ~2~, 84.
-
- Grackle, Bronzed, ~2~, 112.
-
- Grackle, Purple, ~2~, 112.
-
- Grackles, ~2~, 110.
-
- Grosbeak, Black-headed, ~2~, 88.
-
- Grosbeak, Cardinal, ~1~, 69, 132; ~2~, 88;
- portrait, ~2~, 90.
-
- Grosbeak, Rose-breasted, ~2~, 86;
- portrait, ~2~, 86.
-
- Grosbeaks, ~2~, 86.
-
- Grouse, ~1~, 58, 59, 110.
-
- Grouse, Ruffed, ~1~, 111.
-
- Gullet, ~1~, 93.
-
- Gulls, ~1~, 101.
-
-
- Hawk, American Sparrow, ~2~, 189;
- portrait, ~2~, 188.
-
- Hawk, Fish, ~2~, 190;
- portrait, ~2~, 192.
-
- Hawk and Eagle Family, ~2~, 188, 204.
-
- Hawks, food of, ~1~, 52, 53, 126, 127;
- asleep, 59;
- beaks of, 97;
- eyesight of, 101;
- feet of, 106.
-
- Heligoland, ~1~, 101.
-
- Heron, Great Blue, ~2~, 114.
-
- Herons, food of, ~1~, 53, 127;
- bills of, 97;
- story of the hearing of a heron, 103, 104;
- usefulness to man, 127.
-
- Hirundinidæ, ~2~, 69, 201.
-
- Humming Family, ~2~, 143, 202.
-
- Hummingbird, Anna's, ~2~, 149.
-
- Hummingbird, Ruby-throated, absence of male from nest, ~1~, 16;
- method of feeding young, 18; ~2~, 144;
- portrait, ~1~, 18.
-
- Hummingbirds, ~1~, 15, 98.
-
-
- Icteridæ, ~2~, 94, 201.
-
- Identification, ~1~, 137-141.
-
- Indigo-bird, ~1~, 47;
- portrait, ~1~, 46.
-
- Instinct, ~1~, 83.
-
- Intelligence, ~1~, 83-87.
-
-
- Japan, ~1~, 131.
-
- Jay, Blue, learning to fly, ~1~, 31, 32;
- storing food, 54;
- story of a mischievous, 55, 56;
- usefulness to man, 126; ~2~, 113, 121;
- portrait, ~2~, 122.
-
- Jay, Steller's, ~2~, 126.
-
- Jays, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
-
- Kindness of birds to one another, ~1~, 74-77.
-
- Kingbird, ~1~, 14, 129; ~2~, 113, 136;
- portrait, ~2~, 136.
-
- Kingbird, Arkansas, ~2~, 140.
-
- Kingfisher, Belted, ~2~, 170;
- portrait, ~2~, 170.
-
- Kingfisher Family, ~2~, 170, 203.
-
- Kingfishers, ~1~, 21, 115.
-
- Kinglet, Ruby-crowned, ~2~, 14;
- portrait, ~2~, 14.
-
- Kinglet and Gnatcatcher Family, ~2~, 14, 197.
-
-
- Language, ~1~, 43-47.
-
- Laniidæ, ~2~, 59, 200.
-
- Lark, Desert Horned, portrait, ~2~, 132.
-
- Lark, Horned, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark, Old-Field. _See_ Meadowlark.
-
- Lark, Prairie Horned, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark, Shore, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark Family, ~2~, 131, 202.
-
- Legs, ~1~, 92, 105, 107, 108.
-
-
- Magpie, American, ~2~, 126;
- portrait, ~2~, 126.
-
- Magpie, Yellow-billed, ~2~, 126.
-
- Magpies, ~2~, 117.
-
- Martin, Purple, ~2~, 72.
-
- Meadowlark, ~1~, 45, 119, 121; ~2~, 97, 100;
- portrait, ~2~, 100.
-
- Meadowlark, Western, ~2~, 102.
-
- Meadow Starlings, ~2~, 100.
-
- Micropodidæ, ~2~, 150, 202.
-
- Migration, ~1~, 61-68.
-
- Mniotiltidæ, ~2~, 49, 200.
-
- Mocking Thrushes, ~2~, 34, 199.
-
- Mockingbird, ~1~, 45; ~2~, 9, 34, 195.
-
- Motacillidæ, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Moulting, ~1~, 25, 26, 118.
-
-
- Neck, ~1~, 92.
-
- Nests, situations of, ~1~, 9;
- materials of, 9, 10;
- building of, 10;
- seldom used more than once, 10, 11.
-
- Nighthawk, ~1~, 107; ~2~, 158;
- portrait, ~2~, 158.
-
- Norway, ~1~, 131.
-
- Nuthatch, European, ~2~, 21.
-
- Nuthatch, Red-breasted, ~2~, 20.
-
- Nuthatch, Slender-billed, ~2~, 18.
-
- Nuthatch, White-breasted, ~2~, 18;
- portrait, ~1~, 96.
-
- Nuthatch and Chickadee Family, ~2~, 18, 198.
-
- Nuthatches, ~1~, 18, 96, 98.
-
-
- Observation, ~1~, 137-141, 145.
-
- Oil, ~1~, 117.
-
- Oriole, Arizona Hooded, ~2~, 108.
-
- Oriole, Baltimore, nest of, ~1~, 9, 95; ~2~, 104;
- portrait, ~1~, 10.
-
- Oriole, Orchard, ~2~, 107.
-
- Orioles, getting food for young, ~1~, 18;
- teaching young to fly, 33, 34;
- food of, 50;
- affection for young, 78;
- usefulness to man, 129; ~2~, 104.
-
- Osprey, American, ~2~, 190;
- portrait, ~2~, 192.
-
- Ostrich, ~1~, 24.
-
- Ostrich, South American, ~1~, 24.
-
- Ouzel, Water, ~2~, 42;
- portrait, ~2~, 42.
-
- Oven-bird, ~2~, 52.
-
- Owl, American Barn, ~2~, 185.
-
- Owl, Barred, ~1~, 101.
-
- Owl, Burrowing, ~2~, 182.
-
- Owl, Florida Burrowing, ~2~, 182.
-
- Owl, Screech, ~2~, 180;
- portrait, ~2~, 180.
-
- Owl Family, ~2~, 178, 204.
-
- Owls, ~1~, 35;
- food of, 52, 53, 127;
- ears of, 103;
- feet of, 106;
- usefulness to man, 126, 127.
-
-
- Paridæ, ~2~, 18, 198.
-
- Penguin, ~1~, 72.
-
- Petrel, ~1~, 110.
-
- Pewee, Western Wood, ~2~, 142.
-
- Pewee, Wood, ~1~, 47; ~2~, 136, 140.
-
- Phainopepla, ~2~, 67.
-
- Phoebe, ~1~, 35; ~2~, 136.
-
- Picidæ, ~2~, 160, 203.
-
- Pigeons, ~1~, 79, 80.
-
- Pipit, Sprague's, ~2~, 46;
- portrait, ~2~, 46.
-
- Pipits, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Plumage, the nestling, ~1~, 22, 23;
- coloration of, 23, 24, 27, 28;
- moulting, 25, 26, 118;
- change of color without moulting, 26, 27, 118-120;
- protective coloration of, 120, 121;
- recognition marks in, 121, 122.
-
- Poor-will, ~2~, 157.
-
- Protection and attraction of birds, ~1~, 131-135.
-
-
- Quail (bob-white), ~1~, 44, 59.
-
-
- Redbird, ~2~, 88.
-
- Redstart, American, ~1~, 14;
- portrait, ~1~, 14.
-
- Regurgitation, ~1~, 18, 19.
-
- Rhea, ~1~, 24.
-
- Robin, American, arrival, ~1~, 3, 10, 15, 17, 18, 21;
- plumage of young, 23, 34;
- teaching young to bathe, 38, 39;
- notes of, 44, 45;
- food of, 49, 126, 127;
- roosting in flocks, 60;
- devotion to young, 78;
- story of the intelligence of a, 84, 102;
- usefulness to men, 126, 127, 129; ~2~, 5, 6, 38, 65, 167;
- portrait, ~2~, 60.
-
- Robin, Western, ~2~, 6.
-
-
- Sapsucker, Yellow-bellied, ~1~, 85.
-
- Sapsuckers, tail of, ~1~, 113; ~2~, 161.
-
- Scavenger Family, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
- Shrike, Loggerhead, ~2~, 59;
- portrait, ~2~, 60.
-
- Shrike Family, ~2~, 59, 200.
-
- Shrikes, ~1~, 126.
-
- Skylark, Missouri, ~2~, 46.
-
- Skylark, Prairie, ~2~, 46.
-
- Sleeping, ~1~, 57-60.
-
- Song, ~1~, 14, 44-47.
-
- Sparrow, Chipping, ~1~, 54.
-
- Sparrow, English, learning canary's song, ~1~, 46;
- young fed by a wren, 81, 82;
- harmfulness of, 126, 130, 132; ~2~, 32.
-
- Sparrow, Song, arrival, ~1~, 3;
- nest, 9;
- individuality in songs, 45, 47; ~2~, 81.
-
- Sparrow, Tree, ~1~, 58, 128.
-
- Sparrow, White-throated, ~1~, 54.
-
- Sparrow and Finch Family, ~2~, 80, 201.
-
- Sparrows, ~1~, 84, 97; ~2~, 80.
-
- Starlings, Meadow, ~2~, 100.
-
- Stomach, ~1~, 93.
-
- Strigidæ, ~2~, 185, 204.
-
- Swallow, Bank, ~1~, 96.
-
- Swallow, Barn, ~1~, 71, 96; ~2~, 69;
- portrait, _frontispiece_.
-
- Swallow, Cliff _or_ Eave, ~1~, 71; ~2~, 72, 73.
-
- Swallow Family, ~2~, 69, 201.
-
- Swallows, food of, ~1~, 17, 35, 50;
- flocking, 62, 71;
- story of young, 75;
- story showing intelligence, 85;
- wings of, 110.
-
- Swift, Chimney, sleeping, ~1~, 59, 60;
- devotion to young, 78;
- tail of, 113; ~2~, 150.
-
- Swift, Vaux's, ~2~, 150, 152.
-
- Swift Family, ~2~, 150, 202.
-
- Sylviidæ, ~2~, 14, 197.
-
-
- Tail, ~1~, 112, 113.
-
- Tanager, Louisiana, ~2~, 78.
-
- Tanager, Scarlet, ~1~, 79; ~2~, 75;
- portraits, ~1~, 142; ~2~, 76.
-
- Tanager, Summer, ~2~, 78.
-
- Tanager Family, ~2~, 75, 201.
-
- Tanagridæ, ~2~, 75, 201.
-
- Thrasher, Arizona, ~2~, 41.
-
- Thrasher, Brown, ~1~, 113; ~2~, 40;
- portrait, 112.
-
- Thrush, Brown. _See_ Thrasher, Brown.
-
- Thrush, Golden-crowned, ~2~, 52.
-
- Thrush, Hermit, ~2~, 11;
- portrait, ~2~, 10.
-
- Thrush, Western Hermit, ~2~, 11.
-
- Thrush, Wood, ~1~, 133.
-
- Thrush Family, ~2~, 5, 197.
-
- Thrushes, Mocking, ~2~, 34, 199.
-
- Titlarks, ~2~, 46.
-
- Titmice, ~2~, 22, 198.
-
- Titmouse, Tufted, ~2~, 24.
-
- Tongue, ~1~, 97, 98.
-
- Towhee, _or_ Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Towhee, Spurred, ~2~, 84.
-
- Trochilidæ, ~2~, 143, 202.
-
- Troglodytidæ, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Turdidæ, ~2~, 5, 197.
-
- Tyrannidæ, ~2~, 135, 202.
-
-
- Usefulness of birds to man, ~1~, 125-130.
-
-
- Veery, ~1~, 47.
-
- Vireo, Red-eyed, ~1~, 47.
-
- Vireo, Warbling, ~2~, 57.
-
- Vireo, Western Warbling, ~2~, 57.
-
- Vireo, Yellow-throated, ~2~, 56, 57;
- portrait, ~2~, 56.
-
- Vireo Family, ~2~, 55, 200.
-
- Vireonidæ, ~2~, 55, 200.
-
- Vulture, Turkey, _or_ Turkey Buzzard, ~1~, 50, 51; ~2~, 194.
-
- Vultures, American, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
-
- Wagtail Family, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Warbler, Black and White, ~1~, 121;
- portrait, ~1~, 120.
-
- Warbler, Yellow, ~1~, 50; ~2~, 50.
-
- Warbler Family, ~2~, 49, 200.
-
- Warblers, ~1~, 62, 97.
-
- Water, birds in, ~1~, 94;
- for drinking and bathing, 133, 134.
-
- Water-Thrush, ~2~, 52.
-
- Water-Thrush, Louisiana, ~2~, 52.
-
- Waxwing, Cedar. _See_ Cedar-bird.
-
- Waxwing Family, ~2~, 63, 200.
-
- Whip-poor-will, ~1~, 107, 121; ~2~, 155.
-
- Whip-poor-will, Nuttall's, ~2~, 157.
-
- Wings, ~1~, 109-112.
-
- Winter, birds in, ~1~, 66-69.
-
- Woodcock, beak of, ~1~, 96;
- whistling sound of wings, 111.
-
- Woodpecker, Californian, ~2~, 167.
-
- Woodpecker, Downy, ~1~, 50; ~2~, 169;
- portrait, ~2~, 166.
-
- Woodpecker, Golden-winged. _See_ Flicker.
-
- Woodpecker, Red-headed, ~1~, 85; ~2~, 165.
-
- Woodpecker, Yellow-bellied, ~1~, 85.
-
- Woodpecker Family, ~2~, 160, 203.
-
- Woodpeckers, ~1~, 18, 21;
- teaching young to feed itself, 35, 36;
- food of, 50;
- storing food, 54, 55;
- sleeping, 59, 85, 86;
- beaks of, 95;
- tongues of, 98, 103;
- feet of, 106;
- tails of, 113; ~2~, 19.
-
- Wren, House, ~1~, 81, 82; ~2~, 31;
- portrait, ~1~, 80.
-
- Wren, Western House, ~2~, 31.
-
- Wrens, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Wren-Tits, ~2~, 198.
-
-
- Young birds, hatching of, ~1~, 13-15;
- feeding of, 16-20;
- first plumage of, 21-23;
- learning to fly, 29-34, 37-39;
- the mother's anxiety about, 30-32;
- learning to feed themselves, 34-36, 39;
- learning to sing, 36;
- after leaving the nest, 70-73.
-
-
- The Riverside Press
- CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
- U . S . A
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Book 2:
-
-Page 173, "halycon" changed to "halcyon" (called halcyon days)
-
-Page 212, book number was added to Woodcock.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Children's Book of Birds, by
-Olive Thorne Miller
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
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<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Children's Book of Birds, by Olive Thorne Miller.
@@ -90,45 +90,7 @@
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<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Birds, by Olive Thorne Miller
-
-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: The Children's Book of Birds
-
-Author: Olive Thorne Miller
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2012 [EBook #41141]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41141 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter" style="width: 378px;">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="378" height="600" alt="Cover: The Children's Book of Birds: red bird on leafed branch" />
@@ -472,7 +434,7 @@ OLIVE THORNE MILLER.<br />
Agassiz Fuertes, and these are signed with his name. The other
colored plates and the twenty-eight plain half-tones are from
photographs of mounted specimens, many of which are in the
-collection of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, in Cambridge,
+collection of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, and are reproduced by permission.</p>
<p>The First Book also contains twenty cuts in the text.</p></div>
@@ -3081,7 +3043,7 @@ nothing is left above water but their beaks, to
breathe. And they can stay so as long as they
choose, keeping still in one spot, without moving.</p>
-<p>A cormorant in a zoölogical garden, who
+<p>A cormorant in a zoölogical garden, who
wanted to catch some of the swallows skimming
over the pond, sank his body till only his
head was out, and held himself there perfectly
@@ -4831,7 +4793,7 @@ in the other.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5_Boo
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE THRUSH FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Turdidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Turdidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> family is named after the thrushes, but
@@ -5105,7 +5067,7 @@ birds.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE KINGLET AND GNATCATCHER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Sylviidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Sylviidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> family is small in our country. There
@@ -5230,7 +5192,7 @@ well as if he could speak to you.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE NUTHATCH AND CHICKADEE FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Paridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Paridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is another family of small birds. The
@@ -5494,7 +5456,7 @@ give some of his hair to such a brave little creature.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CREEPER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Certhiidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Certhiidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a family of birds who creep; that is,
@@ -5571,7 +5533,7 @@ You can see in the picture how he looks.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Troglodytidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a><br />
+<div class='center'>(<i>Troglodytidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a><br />
<br />
<span class="smcap">First Branch</span></div>
@@ -5940,7 +5902,7 @@ to study.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42_Book_2
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE DIPPER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Cinclidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Cinclidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is only one member of this family in
@@ -6064,7 +6026,7 @@ turned to stone.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE WAGTAIL FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Motacillidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Motacillidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> does not seem very polite to call a family
@@ -6159,7 +6121,7 @@ grown up.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE WARBLER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Mniotiltidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Mniotiltidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> gayest, the liveliest, and almost the smallest
@@ -6339,7 +6301,7 @@ they never came back to the nest.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE VIREO FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Vireonidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Vireonidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> vireos are a small family, fifty species,
@@ -6446,7 +6408,7 @@ him.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SHRIKE FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Laniidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Laniidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">A shrike</span> is a pretty gray bird with white and
@@ -6577,7 +6539,7 @@ harm comes to it.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE WAXWING FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Ampelidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Ampelidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> waxwings are a family of beautiful birds,
@@ -6719,7 +6681,7 @@ elegant pointed crest, and plumage shining like
satin. He sits up very straight on his perch, but
he is a rather shy bird, and so not much is known
about his ways. He is a real mountain lover, living
-on mountains, or in cañons, or the borders of
+on mountains, or in cañons, or the borders of
small streams of California, Arizona, and Texas.</p>
<p>As you see by one of his names, he is a flycatcher.
@@ -6763,7 +6725,7 @@ what we know of their habits.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SWALLOW FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Hirundinidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Hirundinidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is very easy to know this family. They are
@@ -6938,7 +6900,7 @@ pleasant home, and reared their family there.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE TANAGER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Tanagridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Tanagridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a large family of between three and
@@ -7087,7 +7049,7 @@ them.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SPARROW AND FINCH FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is the largest bird family, more than five
@@ -7193,7 +7155,7 @@ nursery.</p>
<p>These little birds eat mostly the seeds of
weeds,&mdash;thistle, ragweed, and beggar's-ticks,&mdash;as
-well as the larvæ of the wheat-midge and
+well as the larvæ of the wheat-midge and
other pests, and they feed great quantities to
their young.</p>
@@ -7275,7 +7237,7 @@ bird before he leaves the nest.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE GROSBEAK BRANCH</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> third division of this family is of grosbeaks.
@@ -7431,7 +7393,7 @@ endure.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CROSSBILL BRANCH</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Fringillidæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> fourth branch of this family is of crossbills.
@@ -7510,7 +7472,7 @@ into a cage, he will die.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE BLACKBIRD FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">There</span> are more than one hundred species of
@@ -7697,7 +7659,7 @@ squeeze it out as if it were hard work to say it.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE MEADOW STARLINGS</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
<div class="figleft" style="width: 395px;">
<img src="images/i043.jpg" width="395" height="600" alt="meadowlark on branch" />
@@ -7799,7 +7761,7 @@ black crickets that do so much damage.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pag
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE ORIOLE BRANCH</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> seems odd to put the gay orioles into the
@@ -7991,7 +7953,7 @@ world over, I think.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Pag
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CROW-BLACKBIRD BRANCH</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Icteridæ</i>)&mdash;Continued</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> fourth branch of this family is of crow-blackbirds
@@ -8196,7 +8158,7 @@ place where they are to sleep.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CROW FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Corvidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Corvidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a large family. Some of our most
@@ -8623,7 +8585,7 @@ for their little ones.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE LARK FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Alaudidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Alaudidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">There</span> are a good many kinds of larks in the
@@ -8665,7 +8627,7 @@ road.</p>
<p>When insects are abroad, he eats the more
dainty small ones, young grasshoppers and locusts
before they get big and tough, small
-beetles and larvæ; and baby larks are fed on
+beetles and larvæ; and baby larks are fed on
them. But he doesn't starve when they are
gone; he is fond of seeds of weeds and grasses.</p>
@@ -8738,7 +8700,7 @@ in his usual attitude, walking.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE FLYCATCHING FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Tyrannidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Tyrannidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Larks</span> may be scarce, but we have plenty of
@@ -8989,7 +8951,7 @@ nice to look at or to handle.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE HUMMING FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Trochilidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Trochilidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is an American family, and no country in
@@ -9207,7 +9169,7 @@ any fear of people.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SWIFT FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Micropodidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Micropodidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Swifts</span> are curious birds, with strange habits.
@@ -9349,7 +9311,7 @@ the whole flock is in and no one hurt.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE GOATSUCKER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Caprimulgidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Caprimulgidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">These</span> are queer-looking birds, having their
@@ -9492,7 +9454,7 @@ injury.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE WOODPECKER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Picidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Picidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">You</span> may generally know a woodpecker the
@@ -9798,7 +9760,7 @@ there is a picture of a flicker at his nest-hole.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE KINGFISHER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Alcedinidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Alcedinidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Most</span> of the Kingfisher family belong to the
@@ -9916,7 +9878,7 @@ the first seven days she builds her nest, and in
the second seven she hatches out the young.
These fourteen days were called <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'halycon'">halcyon</ins> days.
You may find more about this curious story in
-the encyclopædias.</p>
+the encyclopædias.</p>
<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> See <a href="#Appendix_23">Appendix, 23</a>.</p></div></div>
@@ -9929,7 +9891,7 @@ the encyclopædias.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE CUCKOO FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Cuculidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Cuculidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Most</span> of the cuckoo family live in a hotter
@@ -10043,7 +10005,7 @@ had thought were woodpecker tappings.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE OWL FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Bubonidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Bubonidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Owls</span> differ from all other birds in having eyes
@@ -10257,7 +10219,7 @@ the same.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE BARN OWL FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Strigidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Strigidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a small family of which we have but
@@ -10311,7 +10273,7 @@ owlets great quantities of food.</p>
<p>One of these owls has lived for years in a
tower of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
-In the Zoölogical Collection of that city,
+In the Zoölogical Collection of that city,
there was, not long ago, another of the family<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187_Book_2" id="Page_187_Book_2">[187]</a></span>
alive. Wishing to have more of them in the
Zoo, some one watched the nest of the tower
@@ -10356,7 +10318,7 @@ is dressed in soft feathers that make no rustle.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE HAWK AND EAGLE FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Falconidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Falconidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is a family of birds of prey. That is,
@@ -10548,7 +10510,7 @@ their nestlings.</p>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SCAVENGER FAMILY</div>
-<div class='center'>(<i>Cathartidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></div>
+<div class='center'>(<i>Cathartidæ</i>)<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></div>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> is one of the most useful of bird families.
@@ -10630,7 +10592,7 @@ are such as may be observed on the "bird in the bush" while the added hints
on habits, etc., will be found helpful in identification.</i></p></div>
-<p><a id="Appendix_1"></a>1. Turdidæ: <span class="smcap">Thrushes</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_1"></a>1. Turdidæ: <span class="smcap">Thrushes</span>.</p>
<p>Medium size; bill shorter than head, straight or nearly
so; bristles (hair-like feathers) at corner of mouth; wings
@@ -10647,7 +10609,7 @@ usually on the lower part of trees in the woods (except
robin and bluebird) or on the ground, where they get
most of their food.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_2"></a>2. Sylviidæ: <span class="smcap">Kinglets</span> and <span class="smcap">Gnatcatchers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_2"></a>2. Sylviidæ: <span class="smcap">Kinglets</span> and <span class="smcap">Gnatcatchers</span>.</p>
<p>This family is divided into two subfamilies.</p>
@@ -10671,7 +10633,7 @@ legs rather long; toes small. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Active, beautiful nest builders, found in the tops of
trees. Insectivorous.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_3"></a>3. Paridæ: <span class="smcap">Nuthatches</span>, <span class="smcap">Titmice</span>, etc.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_3"></a>3. Paridæ: <span class="smcap">Nuthatches</span>, <span class="smcap">Titmice</span>, etc.</p>
<p>This family is divided into three subfamilies.</p>
@@ -10694,7 +10656,7 @@ No noticeable change of plumage with season.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Wren-Tits</span> and <span class="smcap">Bush-Tits</span>: Very small; bill short and
conical; tail rounded. Sexes alike.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_4"></a>4. Certhiidæ: <span class="smcap">Creepers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_4"></a>4. Certhiidæ: <span class="smcap">Creepers</span>.</p>
<p>Smaller than English sparrow; bill slender and curved
downward; wings rather pointed, long as tail; tail graduated,
@@ -10704,7 +10666,7 @@ and strongly curved. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: insects. Sexes alike, and young the same.
Found circling tree trunks.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199_Book_2" id="Page_199_Book_2">[199]</a></span><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_5"></a>5. Troglodytidæ: <span class="smcap">Wrens</span> and <span class="smcap">Mocking Thrushes</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_5"></a>5. Troglodytidæ: <span class="smcap">Wrens</span> and <span class="smcap">Mocking Thrushes</span>.</p>
<p>This family is divided into two subfamilies.</p>
@@ -10724,7 +10686,7 @@ like thrushes; fine singers. (Ridgway.)</p>
of them found in bushy borders of woods, some about
gardens and houses, and others in various places.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_6"></a>6. Cinclidæ: <span class="smcap">Dippers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_6"></a>6. Cinclidæ: <span class="smcap">Dippers</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, shorter
than head; wings short, stiff and rounded; tail shorter
@@ -10732,11 +10694,11 @@ than wings, soft and square; claws strongly curved;
plumage soft and compact; body stout, thickset. Sexes
alike. (Coues.)</p>
-<p>Food: water insects and larvæ. Found in and about
+<p>Food: water insects and larvæ. Found in and about
the brooks of the Rocky Mountains and other mountains
of the West.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_7"></a>7. Motacillidæ: <span class="smcap">Wagtails</span> and <span class="smcap">Pipits</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_7"></a>7. Motacillidæ: <span class="smcap">Wagtails</span> and <span class="smcap">Pipits</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, cone
shaped, nearly as high as wide, at base; short bristles at
@@ -10747,7 +10709,7 @@ very long, sharp and slightly curved. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Sexes alike. Food: insects. Found on the ground,
where they walk, and wag their tails.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200_Book_2" id="Page_200_Book_2">[200]</a></span><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_8"></a>8. Mniotiltidæ: <span class="smcap">Warblers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_8"></a>8. Mniotiltidæ: <span class="smcap">Warblers</span>.</p>
<p>It is almost impossible to characterize this family, there
are so many varieties. With few exceptions they are
@@ -10756,7 +10718,7 @@ changes of plumage with age and season. Some are
found in the tops of trees, some on bushes, and some on
the ground. Food: insects. (Coues.)<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_9"></a>9. Vireonidæ: <span class="smcap">Vireos</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_9"></a>9. Vireonidæ: <span class="smcap">Vireos</span>.</p>
<p>Generally smaller than an English sparrow, and more
slender; bill notched in both mandibles; tail rather
@@ -10768,7 +10730,7 @@ young the same, without spots or streaks. Some found
in trees in the woods, and others about towns where
English sparrows are not too numerous.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_10"></a>10. Laniidæ: <span class="smcap">Shrikes</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_10"></a>10. Laniidæ: <span class="smcap">Shrikes</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than an English sparrow; bill powerful, tip
hooked and notched; wings short, rounded; tail long and
@@ -10778,7 +10740,7 @@ much graduated. (Ridgway.)</p>
Sexes alike, and young the same. Found on outside of
low trees, fences, telegraph wires, and peaks of roofs.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_11"></a>11. Ampelidæ: <span class="smcap">Waxwings</span>, etc.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_11"></a>11. Ampelidæ: <span class="smcap">Waxwings</span>, etc.</p>
<p>Somewhat larger than an English sparrow; bill short,
broad and rather flat; head with pointed crest; wings
@@ -10788,7 +10750,7 @@ length. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: insects and fruit. Sexes usually alike. Found
in trees in woods and in shade and orchard trees.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201_Book_2" id="Page_201_Book_2">[201]</a></span><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_12"></a>12. Hirundinidæ: <span class="smcap">Swallows</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_12"></a>12. Hirundinidæ: <span class="smcap">Swallows</span>.</p>
<p>About the size of an English, sparrow; bill short, flat,
and very broad at the head; mouth opens back nearly to
@@ -10800,7 +10762,7 @@ lustrous. (Ridgway.)</p>
little different. Found in flocks, in the air, on roofs or
fences or telegraph wires, sometimes on trees.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_13"></a>13. Tanagridæ: <span class="smcap">Tanagers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_13"></a>13. Tanagridæ: <span class="smcap">Tanagers</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than an English sparrow; bill conical, notched,
bristles; wings longer than tail; tail of moderate length,
@@ -10809,7 +10771,7 @@ somewhat notched; legs rather short. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: insects. Sexes unlike. Found on trees in the
woods.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_14"></a>14. Fringillidæ: <span class="smcap">Finches</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_14"></a>14. Fringillidæ: <span class="smcap">Finches</span>.</p>
<p>Mostly about the size of an English sparrow, some
smaller, some larger; bill short, high, and strong, turned
@@ -10819,7 +10781,7 @@ down at the back corner; wings and tail variable.
<p>Seed and insect eaters. Found everywhere&mdash;on trees,
bushes, on ground, in woods, fields, and about houses.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_15"></a>15. Icteridæ: <span class="smcap">Blackbirds</span>, <span class="smcap">Orioles</span>, etc.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_15"></a>15. Icteridæ: <span class="smcap">Blackbirds</span>, <span class="smcap">Orioles</span>, etc.</p>
<p>Larger than an English sparrow; bill straight or
gently curved; mouth turned down at corners; tail
@@ -10831,7 +10793,7 @@ Found everywhere, on trees, in marshes, in woods.
Many gregarious, found in flocks, some except in nesting
season, and others all the year round.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202_Book_2" id="Page_202_Book_2">[202]</a></span><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_16"></a>16. Corvidæ: <span class="smcap">Crows</span> and <span class="smcap">Jays</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_16"></a>16. Corvidæ: <span class="smcap">Crows</span> and <span class="smcap">Jays</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than a robin. There are two subfamilies.</p>
@@ -10844,7 +10806,7 @@ rounded. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: almost everything&mdash;seeds, fruit, sometimes
eggs and young birds. Found in woody places.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_17"></a>17. Alaudidæ: <span class="smcap">Larks</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_17"></a>17. Alaudidæ: <span class="smcap">Larks</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than an English sparrow; bill short, conical,
frontal feathers extend along the side; wings pointed;
@@ -10853,7 +10815,7 @@ claw on hind toe very long and nearly straight. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: insects. Sexes nearly alike. Found on ground
in fields and roads.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_18"></a>18. Tyrannidæ: <span class="smcap">Flycatchers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_18"></a>18. Tyrannidæ: <span class="smcap">Flycatchers</span>.</p>
<p>Mostly larger than an English sparrow; bill broad,
flattened, curved downward at end, and notched at tip;
@@ -10862,7 +10824,7 @@ bristles along the gape; wings and tail variable. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Entirely insectivorous. Found in woods and fields and
about houses.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_19"></a>19. Trochilidæ: <span class="smcap">Hummingbirds</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_19"></a>19. Trochilidæ: <span class="smcap">Hummingbirds</span>.</p>
<p>Our smallest birds; bill slender, sharp, and straight,
usually longer than head; wings long and pointed; legs
@@ -10872,7 +10834,7 @@ short; feet small and weak; claws curved and sharp.
<p>Food: tiny insects and the honey of flowers. Sexes
unlike. Found about flowers.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_20"></a>20. Micropodidæ: <span class="smcap">Swifts</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_20"></a>20. Micropodidæ: <span class="smcap">Swifts</span>.</p>
<p>About the size of an English sparrow; bill very small,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203_Book_2" id="Page_203_Book_2">[203]</a></span>
triangular, much broader than high, without bristles;
@@ -10882,7 +10844,7 @@ short, ending in stiff spines; plumage compact. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Food: entirely insects. Sexes alike. Found in the air
or inside chimneys or hollow trees.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_21"></a>21. Caprimulgidæ: <span class="smcap">Goatsuckers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_21"></a>21. Caprimulgidæ: <span class="smcap">Goatsuckers</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than a robin; bill very short; gape enormously
long and wide; mouth open to behind the eyes; wings
@@ -10892,7 +10854,7 @@ long; plumage soft. (Ridgway.)</p>
found in the edge of woods, and another species about
towns.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_22"></a>22. Picidæ: <span class="smcap">Woodpeckers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_22"></a>22. Picidæ: <span class="smcap">Woodpeckers</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than an English sparrow; bill usually straight,
pointed or chisel-shaped at tip; tongue extensile and
@@ -10904,7 +10866,7 @@ species, two forward and two backward for climbing.
<p>Insectivorous. Sexes unlike. Found on trees (except
one species) in woods or orchards.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_23"></a>23. Alcedinidæ: <span class="smcap">Kingfishers</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_23"></a>23. Alcedinidæ: <span class="smcap">Kingfishers</span>.</p>
<p>Usually larger than a robin; bill long and straight;
tongue small; head large, crested; wings short; legs
@@ -10913,7 +10875,7 @@ small; outer and middle toe united half their length.
<p>Food: fishes. Sexes slightly unlike. Found by water.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_24"></a>24. Cuculidæ: <span class="smcap">Cuckoos</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_24"></a>24. Cuculidæ: <span class="smcap">Cuckoos</span>.</p>
<p>Larger than a robin; bill narrow and high, rather long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204_Book_2" id="Page_204_Book_2">[204]</a></span>
and curved downward; wings long; tail long, soft, and
@@ -10921,7 +10883,7 @@ rounded; toes in pairs. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Insectivorous. Sexes alike. Found on trees.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_25"></a>25. Bubonidæ: <span class="smcap">Owls</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_25"></a>25. Bubonidæ: <span class="smcap">Owls</span>.</p>
<p>Mostly larger than a robin, a few smaller; bill hooked;
eyes directed forward and surrounded by radiating feathers;
@@ -10932,7 +10894,7 @@ feet sometimes feathered. (Ridgway.)</p>
<p>Sexes alike. Flesh eaters. Usually nocturnal. Most
species found in holes in trees or old buildings.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_26"></a>26. Strigidæ: <span class="smcap">Barn Owls</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_26"></a>26. Strigidæ: <span class="smcap">Barn Owls</span>.</p>
<p>Much larger than a robin; bill hooked; eyes very
small; triangular-shaped eye disk; tail emarginate; claws
@@ -10942,7 +10904,7 @@ sharp and strong; very downy plumage. (Ridgway).</p>
Exclusively nocturnal. Found in barns and deserted
buildings.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_27"></a>27. Falconidæ: <span class="smcap">Hawks and Eagles</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_27"></a>27. Falconidæ: <span class="smcap">Hawks and Eagles</span>.</p>
<p>(There are several subfamilies.)</p>
@@ -10953,7 +10915,7 @@ directed sideways; eyelids with lashes; toes never feathered.
<p>Carnivorous and insectivorous. Sexes usually alike,
but female larger.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-<p><a id="Appendix_28"></a>28. Cathartidæ: <span class="smcap">American Vultures</span>.</p>
+<p><a id="Appendix_28"></a>28. Cathartidæ: <span class="smcap">American Vultures</span>.</p>
<p>Large as a turkey, one species much larger; whole
head and sometimes neck bare of feathers; eyes prominent;
@@ -10979,11 +10941,11 @@ Affections, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>-<a href="
<br />
Air-sacs, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.<br />
<br />
-Alaudidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_131_Book_2">131</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
+Alaudidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_131_Book_2">131</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
-Alcedinidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_170_Book_2">170</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
+Alcedinidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_170_Book_2">170</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
<br />
-Ampelidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_63_Book_2">63</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
+Ampelidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_63_Book_2">63</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
<br />
Arrival in spring, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11032,7 +10994,7 @@ Books about birds, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>-
<br />
Brooding, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>-<a href="#Page_16">16</a>.<br />
<br />
-Bubonidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_178_Book_2">178</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
+Bubonidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_178_Book_2">178</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
<br />
Bunting, Towhee, <i>or</i> Chewink, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_84_Book_2">84</a>;<br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portrait, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</span><br />
@@ -11046,7 +11008,7 @@ Buzzard, Turkey, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a
<br />
Canary, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.<br />
<br />
-Caprimulgidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_155_Book_2">155</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
+Caprimulgidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_155_Book_2">155</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
<br />
Cardinal, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_88_Book_2">88</a>;<br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portrait, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_90_Book_2">90</a>.</span><br />
@@ -11055,7 +11017,7 @@ Catbird, food of, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">jerking the tail, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_37_Book_2">37</a>, <a href="#Page_125_Book_2">125</a>;</span><br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portrait, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_36_Book_2">36</a>.</span><br />
<br />
-Cathartidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_194_Book_2">194</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
+Cathartidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_194_Book_2">194</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
<br />
Cave-dwelling Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_30_Book_2">30</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11064,7 +11026,7 @@ Cave-dwelling Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_30_Book_2"
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">usefulness to man, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_63_Book_2">63</a>;</span><br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portrait, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</span><br />
<br />
-Certhiidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_27_Book_2">27</a>, <a href="#Page_198_Book_2">198</a>.<br />
+Certhiidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_27_Book_2">27</a>, <a href="#Page_198_Book_2">198</a>.<br />
<br />
Chat, Long-tailed, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_53_Book_2">53</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11086,14 +11048,14 @@ Chickadees, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_22_Book_2">22</a>.<b
<br />
Chuck-will's-widow, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_157_Book_2">157</a>.<br />
<br />
-Cinclidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_42_Book_2">42</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
+Cinclidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_42_Book_2">42</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
<br />
Color in feathers, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.<br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Plumage">Plumage</a>.</span><br />
<br />
Cormorant, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.<br />
<br />
-Corvidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_117_Book_2">117</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
+Corvidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_117_Book_2">117</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
Cowbird, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_51_Book_2">51</a>, <a href="#Page_98_Book_2">98</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11128,7 +11090,7 @@ Cuckoo, Yellow-billed, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_174_Book_
<br />
Cuckoo Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_174_Book_2">174</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
<br />
-Cuculidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_174_Book_2">174</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
+Cuculidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_174_Book_2">174</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
Dipper, American, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_42_Book_2">42</a>;<br />
@@ -11152,7 +11114,7 @@ Eggs, beauty of, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br
Eyes, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
-Falconidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_188_Book_2">188</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
+Falconidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_188_Book_2">188</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
<br />
Feathers, first appearance on the young bird, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;<br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of the wing, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>-<a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</span><br />
@@ -11189,7 +11151,7 @@ Food, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;-<a href="#Page
<br />
Frigate-bird, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.<br />
<br />
-Fringillidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_80_Book_2">80</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
+Fringillidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_80_Book_2">80</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
Geese, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.<br />
@@ -11261,7 +11223,7 @@ Herons, food of, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">story of the hearing of a heron, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</span><br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">usefulness to man, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</span><br />
<br />
-Hirundinidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_69_Book_2">69</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
+Hirundinidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_69_Book_2">69</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
<br />
Humming Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_143_Book_2">143</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11274,7 +11236,7 @@ Hummingbird, Ruby-throated, absence of male from nest, <span class="smallnum">1<
Hummingbirds, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
-Icteridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_94_Book_2">94</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
+Icteridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_94_Book_2">94</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
<br />
Identification, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>-<a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11321,7 +11283,7 @@ Kinglet and Gnatcatcher Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_
<br />
Language, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>-<a href="#Page_47">47</a>.<br />
<br />
-Laniidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_59_Book_2">59</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
+Laniidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_59_Book_2">59</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
<br />
Lark, Desert Horned, portrait, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_132_Book_2">132</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11354,17 +11316,17 @@ Meadowlark, Western, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_102_Book_2"
<br />
Meadow Starlings, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_100_Book_2">100</a>.<br />
<br />
-Micropodidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_150_Book_2">150</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
+Micropodidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_150_Book_2">150</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
Migration, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>-<a href="#Page_68">68</a>.<br />
<br />
-Mniotiltidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_49_Book_2">49</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
+Mniotiltidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_49_Book_2">49</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
<br />
Mocking Thrushes, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_34_Book_2">34</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
<br />
Mockingbird, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_9_Book_2">9</a>, <a href="#Page_34_Book_2">34</a>, <a href="#Page_195_Book_2">195</a>.<br />
<br />
-Motacillidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_46_Book_2">46</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
+Motacillidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_46_Book_2">46</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
<br />
Moulting, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11444,7 +11406,7 @@ Owls, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br />
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">usefulness to man, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</span><br />
<br />
<br />
-Paridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_18_Book_2">18</a>, <a href="#Page_198_Book_2">198</a>.<br />
+Paridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_18_Book_2">18</a>, <a href="#Page_198_Book_2">198</a>.<br />
<br />
Penguin, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11458,7 +11420,7 @@ Phainopepla, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_67_Book_2">67</a>.<
<br />
Ph&oelig;be, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_136_Book_2">136</a>.<br />
<br />
-Picidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_160_Book_2">160</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
+Picidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_160_Book_2">160</a>, <a href="#Page_203_Book_2">203</a>.<br />
<br />
Pigeons, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11548,7 +11510,7 @@ Starlings, Meadow, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_100_Book_2">1
<br />
Stomach, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.<br />
<br />
-Strigidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_185_Book_2">185</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
+Strigidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_185_Book_2">185</a>, <a href="#Page_204_Book_2">204</a>.<br />
<br />
Swallow, Bank, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11573,7 +11535,7 @@ Swift, Vaux's, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_150_Book_2">150</
<br />
Swift Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_150_Book_2">150</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
-Sylviidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_14_Book_2">14</a>, <a href="#Page_197_Book_2">197</a>.<br />
+Sylviidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_14_Book_2">14</a>, <a href="#Page_197_Book_2">197</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
Tail, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.<br />
@@ -11587,7 +11549,7 @@ Tanager, Summer, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_78_Book_2">78</
<br />
Tanager Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_75_Book_2">75</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
<br />
-Tanagridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_75_Book_2">75</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
+Tanagridæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_75_Book_2">75</a>, <a href="#Page_201_Book_2">201</a>.<br />
<br />
Thrasher, Arizona, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_41_Book_2">41</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11622,13 +11584,13 @@ Towhee, <i>or</i> Chewink, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_76">7
<br />
Towhee, Spurred, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_84_Book_2">84</a>.<br />
<br />
-Trochilidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_143_Book_2">143</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
+Trochilidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_143_Book_2">143</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
-Troglodytidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_30_Book_2">30</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
+Troglodytidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_30_Book_2">30</a>, <a href="#Page_199_Book_2">199</a>.<br />
<br />
-Turdidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_5_Book_2">5</a>, <a href="#Page_197_Book_2">197</a>.<br />
+Turdidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_5_Book_2">5</a>, <a href="#Page_197_Book_2">197</a>.<br />
<br />
-Tyrannidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_135_Book_2">135</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
+Tyrannidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_135_Book_2">135</a>, <a href="#Page_202_Book_2">202</a>.<br />
<br />
<br />
Usefulness of birds to man, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>-<a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br />
@@ -11647,7 +11609,7 @@ Vireo, Yellow-throated, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_56_Book_
<br />
Vireo Family, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_55_Book_2">55</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
<br />
-Vireonidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_55_Book_2">55</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
+Vireonidæ, <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_55_Book_2">55</a>, <a href="#Page_200_Book_2">200</a>.<br />
<br />
Vulture, Turkey, <i>or</i> Turkey Buzzard, <span class="smallnum">1</span>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>; <span class="smallnum">2</span>, <a href="#Page_194_Book_2">194</a>.<br />
<br />
@@ -11750,382 +11712,6 @@ U . S . A<br />
<p>Page 212, book number was added to Woodcock.</p>
</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
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-Olive Thorne Miller
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41141 ***</div>
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-Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Birds, by Olive Thorne Miller
-
-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: The Children's Book of Birds
-
-Author: Olive Thorne Miller
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2012 [EBook #41141]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-[Illustration: BARN SWALLOW]
-
-
-
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-BY
-
-OLIVE THORNE MILLER
-
-WITH SIXTEEN COLORED PLATES AND MANY OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-[Illustration]
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1899 AND 1901, BY H. M. MILLER
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF BIRDS combines under a single cover the First and
-Second Books of Birds, originally published in 1899 and 1901
-respectively and still popular with children in and out of school and
-with other beginners in the study of birds.
-
-The book is intended to interest young people in the ways and habits of
-birds and to stimulate them to further study. It has grown out of my
-experience in talking to schools. From the youngest kindergarten scholar
-to boys and girls of sixteen and eighteen, I have never failed to find
-young people intensely interested so long as I would tell them about bow
-the birds live.
-
-Some of the results of these talks that have come to my knowledge have
-been astonishing and far-reaching, such as that of one boy of seven or
-eight, who persuaded the village boys around his summer home to give up
-taking eggs and killing birds, and watch them instead, and who was
-dubbed "Professor" by his eager followers. The effect has always been to
-make children love and respect the living bird.
-
-It has therefore seemed to me that what is needed at first is not the
-science of ornithology,--however diluted,--but some account of the life
-and habits, to arouse sympathy and interest in the living bird, neither
-as a target nor as a producer of eggs, but as a fellow-creature whose
-acquaintance it would be pleasant to make.
-
-Naturally I have drawn on my own observations for much of the matter
-contained in this book, but these have been supplemented by consultation
-of recognized authorities in the various fields of ornithology.
-
-In each bird family treated of in the Second Book I have given accounts
-of species to be found in the South and West as well as in the Eastern
-States, and I have selected the most common or typical species of each
-family. In cases where it was possible, I have chosen species
-represented in the different sections of the country, not only because
-the family traits are better shown, but because it is more encouraging
-to a beginner to become acquainted with birds he can see almost
-anywhere. When familiar with these, he will be able to identify and
-study the rarer species.
-
- OLIVE THORNE MILLER.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- FIRST BOOK
-
- I. WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW 1
- II. WHEN THEY COME IN THE SPRING 3
-
-
- THE NESTLING
-
- III. THE BIRD'S HOME 9
- IV. THE BABY BIRD 13
- V. HOW HE IS FED 17
- VI. HIS FIRST SUIT 21
- VII. HOW HE CHANGES HIS CLOTHES 25
- VIII. HIS FIRST FLIGHT 29
- IX. HIS EDUCATION 33
- X. SOME OF HIS LESSONS 37
-
-
- THE BIRD GROWN UP
-
- XI. THE BIRD'S LANGUAGE 43
- XII. WHAT HE EATS 48
- XIII. MORE ABOUT HIS FOOD 52
- XIV. WHERE HE SLEEPS 57
- XV. HIS TRAVELS 61
- XVI. HIS WINTER HOME 66
- XVII. HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS 70
- XVIII. HIS KINDNESS TO OTHERS 74
- XIX. HIS AFFECTIONS 78
- XX. HIS INTELLIGENCE 83
-
-
- HOW HE IS MADE
-
- XXI. HIS BODY 91
- XXII. HIS BEAK AND TONGUE 95
- XXIII. HIS EYES AND EARS 100
- XXIV. HIS FEET AND LEGS 105
- XXV. HIS WINGS AND TAIL 109
- XXVI. HIS DRESS 114
- XXVII. DIFFERENT COLORED SUITS 118
-
-
- HIS RELATIONS WITH US
-
- XXVIII. HOW HE WORKS FOR US 125
- XXIX. HOW TO ATTRACT HIM ABOUT OUR HOMES 131
- XXX. HOW TO STUDY HIM 136
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
- I. WHAT IS A BIRD FAMILY? 1
- II. THE THRUSH FAMILY 5
- American Robin 6
- Hermit Thrush 11
- III. THE KINGLET AND GNATCATCHER FAMILY 14
- Ruby-crowned Kinglet 14
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 16
- IV. THE NUTHATCH AND CHICKADEE FAMILY 18
- White-breasted Nuthatch 18
- Red-breasted Nuthatch 20
- Chickadee 22
- Tufted Titmouse 24
- V. THE CREEPER FAMILY 27
- Brown Creeper 27
- VI. THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY (First Branch) 30
- House Wren 31
- VII. THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY (Second Branch) 34
- Mockingbird 34
- Catbird 37
- Thrasher 40
- VIII. THE DIPPER FAMILY 42
- American Dipper 42
- IX. THE WAGTAIL FAMILY 46
- Sprague's Pipit 46
- X. THE WARBLER FAMILY 49
- Yellow Warbler 50
- Oven-bird 52
- Yellow-breasted Chat 53
- XI. THE VIREO FAMILY 55
- Yellow-throated Vireo 56
- Warbling Vireo 57
- XII. THE SHRIKE FAMILY 59
- Loggerhead Shrike 59
- XIII. THE WAXWING FAMILY 63
- Cedar-bird 63
- Phainopepla 67
- XIV. THE SWALLOW FAMILY 69
- Barn Swallow 69
- Cliff Swallow, or Eave Swallow 72
- Purple Martin 72
- XV. THE TANAGER FAMILY 75
- Scarlet Tanager 75
- Summer Tanager 78
- Louisiana Tanager 78
- XVI. THE SPARROW AND FINCH FAMILY 80
- SPARROWS
- Song Sparrow 81
- FINCHES
- Goldfinch 82
- Towhee, or Chewink 84
- XVII. THE GROSBEAK BRANCH 86
- Rose-breasted Grosbeak 86
- Black-headed Grosbeak 88
- Cardinal Grosbeak, or Cardinal 88
- XVIII. THE CROSSBILL BRANCH 91
- American Crossbill 91
- White-winged Crossbill 92
- XIX. THE BLACKBIRD FAMILY 94
- MARSH BLACKBIRDS
- Red-winged Blackbird 94
- Cowbird 98
- XX. THE MEADOW STARLINGS 100
- Meadowlark 100
- Western Meadowlark 102
- XXI. THE ORIOLE BRANCH 104
- Baltimore Oriole 104
- Orchard Oriole 107
- Arizona Hooded Oriole 108
- XXII. THE CROW-BLACKBIRD BRANCH 110
- Purple Grackle 112
- Bronzed Grackle 112
- Brewer's Blackbird 113
- XXIII. THE CROW FAMILY 117
- American Crow 117
- Blue Jay 121
- Steller's Jay 126
- American Magpie 126
- XXIV. THE LARK FAMILY 131
- Horned Lark 131
- Prairie Horned Lark 131
- XXV. THE FLYCATCHING FAMILY 135
- Kingbird 136
- Arkansas Kingbird 140
- Wood Pewee 140
- Western Wood Pewee 142
- XXVI. THE HUMMING FAMILY 143
- Ruby-throated Hummingbird 144
- Anna's Hummingbird 149
- XXVII. THE SWIFT FAMILY 150
- Chimney Swift 150
- XXVIII. THE GOATSUCKER FAMILY 155
- Whip-poor-will 155
- Chuck-will's-widow 157
- Poor-will 157
- Nighthawk 158
- XXIX. THE WOODPECKER FAMILY 160
- Northern Flicker 161
- Red-shafted Flicker 162
- Red-headed Woodpecker 165
- Californian Woodpecker 167
- XXX. THE KINGFISHER FAMILY 170
- Belted Kingfisher 170
- XXXI. THE CUCKOO FAMILY 174
- Yellow-billed Cuckoo 174
- XXXII. THE OWL FAMILY 178
- Screech Owl 180
- Burrowing Owl 182
- XXXIII. THE BARN OWL FAMILY 185
- American Barn Owl 185
- XXXIV. THE HAWK AND EAGLE FAMILY 188
- American Sparrow Hawk 189
- American Osprey, or Fish Hawk 190
- Bald Eagle 192
- XXXV. THE SCAVENGER FAMILY 194
- Turkey Vulture 194
- APPENDIX
- Characters of the North American Representatives of the
- Families mentioned in this Book 197
- INDEX 205
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- BARN SWALLOW (colored) _Frontispiece_
-
-
-FIRST BOOK
-
- BALTIMORE ORIOLE AND NEST (colored) 10
- REDSTARTS (FEMALE ON NEST) (colored) 14
- RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD--MALE, FEMALE, AND
- NEST WITH YOUNG 18
- YOUNG WOOD THRUSH 22
- AMERICAN GOLDFINCH (colored) 26
- BLUEBIRD (colored) 38
- INDIGO-BIRD 46
- AMERICAN ROBIN (colored) 60
- CHEWINK 76
- HOUSE WREN 80
- FLICKER 86
- WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH 96
- LESSER YELLOWLEGS 106
- BROWN THRASHER 112
- BLACK AND WHITE WARBLER 120
- CEDAR-BIRD (colored) 126
- SCARLET TANAGER--MALE AND FEMALE 142
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
- HERMIT THRUSH 10
- RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 14
- CHICKADEE 22
- BROWN CREEPER (colored) 28
- CATBIRD 36
- AMERICAN DIPPER 42
- SPRAGUE'S PIPIT 46
- YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT (colored) 52
- YELLOW-THROATED VIREO AND NEST 56
- LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE 60
- SCARLET TANAGER (colored) 76
- ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK (colored) 86
- CARDINAL 90
- RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD 94
- MEADOWLARK (colored) 100
- BLUE JAY 122
- AMERICAN MAGPIE (colored) 126
- DESERT HORNED LARK 132
- KINGBIRD (colored) 136
- NIGHTHAWK 158
- DOWNY WOODPECKER 166
- BELTED KINGFISHER (colored) 170
- YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO 174
- SCREECH OWL 180
- SPARROW HAWK 188
- AMERICAN OSPREY, OR FISH HAWK (colored) 192
-
- Eight of the sixteen colored plates are from drawings
- by Louis Agassiz Fuertes, and these are signed with
- his name. The other colored plates and the
- twenty-eight plain half-tones are from photographs of
- mounted specimens, many of which are in the collection
- of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, in Cambridge,
- Massachusetts, and are reproduced by permission.
-
- The First Book also contains twenty cuts in the text.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST BOOK
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRST BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW
-
-
-BIRDS seem to be the happiest creatures on earth, yet they have none of
-what we call the comforts of life.
-
-They have no houses to live in, no beds to sleep on, no breakfast and
-dinner provided for them.
-
-This book is to tell something about them; where they live and what they
-eat, where they sleep, how they get their beautiful dress, and many
-other things. But no one can tell all about their lives and habits, for
-no one knows all their ways.
-
-Men who study dead birds can tell how they are made, how their bones are
-put together, and how many feathers there are in the wings and tail. Of
-course it is well to know these things. But to see how birds live is
-much more interesting than to look at dead ones.
-
-It is pleasant to see how mother birds build their nests, and how they
-take care of their nestlings. It is charming to see the young ones when
-they begin to fly, and to know how they are taught to find their food,
-and to keep out of danger, and to sing, and everything young birds need
-to know.
-
-Then when they are grown up, it is interesting to find out where they go
-in winter, and why they do not stay with us all the year round.
-
-One who goes into the field to watch and study their ways will be
-surprised to find how much like people they act. And after studying
-living birds, he will never want to kill them. It will seem to him
-almost like murder.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-WHEN THEY COME IN THE SPRING
-
-
-IN the long, cold winter of the New England and Middle States, not many
-birds are usually seen. In the cities there is always the English
-sparrow, and in the country, now and then a chickadee, or a woodpecker,
-or a small flock of goldfinches.
-
-But very early in the spring, long before grass is green, even while
-snow is on the ground, the birds begin to come.
-
-Some morning a robin will appear, standing up very straight on a fence
-or tree, showing his bright red breast and black cap, flirting his tail,
-and looking as if he were glad to be back in his old home.
-
-Then perhaps the same day will come the hoarse chack of a blackbird, and
-two or three will fly over and alight in a big bare tree, looking, it
-may be, for a good place to build a bird city.
-
-Soon will be heard the sweet little song of the song sparrow or the
-bluebird, and then we shall know that summer is coming, for these are
-the first birds of spring.
-
-Day after day, as the snow melts away and the sunshine grows hotter,
-more birds will come. One day a catbird or two, another day an oriole in
-black and gold, and another day a pert little wren. So it will go on,
-till by the time June comes in, all our birds will be back with us, very
-busy, hopping around in our bushes and trees, making their nests all
-about, and singing the whole day long.
-
-Almost the first thing every bird thinks of, when he comes to us, is
-making the nest. For summer is the only time in his life that a bird has
-a home.
-
-He does not need a house to live in. He cares nothing for a roof to
-cover him, because when the sun is hot, he has the broad green leaves on
-the trees to shade him. And when it rains his neat feather coat is like
-a waterproof that lets the drops run off, leaving him warm and dry under
-it.
-
-He does not need a dining-room, because he eats wherever he finds his
-food, and he wants no kitchen, because he prefers his food raw.
-
-He has no use for a bedroom, because he can sleep on any twig; the whole
-world is his bedroom.
-
-He cares nothing for closets and bureaus, because he has only one suit
-of clothes at a time, and he washes and dries that without taking it
-off.
-
-He wants no fire to keep him warm, for when it is too cold he spreads
-his wings and flies to a warmer place. A bird has really no need of a
-house,--excepting when he is a baby, before his eyes are open, or his
-feathers have come, or his wings have grown. While he is blind, naked,
-and hungry, he must have a warm, snug cradle.
-
-So when the bird fathers and mothers come in the spring the first thing
-they do is to find good places and build nice cradles, for they are very
-fond of their little ones. They spend the spring and summer in working
-for them, keeping them warm, feeding them till they are grown up, and
-then teaching them to fly and to take care of themselves, so that when
-summer is gone they will be ready to go with the other birds to their
-winter home.
-
-
-
-
-THE NESTLING
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE BIRD'S HOME
-
-
-EACH bird mother has her own way of making the nest, but there is one
-thing almost all of them try to do, and that is to hide it.
-
-They cannot put their little homes out in plain sight, as we do our
-houses, because so many creatures want to rob them. Squirrels and snakes
-and rats, and some big birds, and cats and many others, like to eat eggs
-and young birds.
-
-So most birds try, first of all, to find good hiding-places. Some tiny
-warblers go to the tops of the tallest trees, and hide the nest among
-the leaves. Orioles hang the swinging cradle at the end of a branch,
-where cats and snakes and naughty boys cannot come. Song sparrows tuck
-the little home in a tuft of weeds, on the ground, and bobolinks hide it
-in the deep grass.
-
-After a safe place is found, they have to get something to build of.
-They hunt all about and gather small twigs, or grass stems, or fine
-rootlets, and pull narrow strips of bark off the grapevines and the
-birch-trees, or they pick up strings and horsehairs, and many other
-things. Robins and swallows use mud.
-
-[Illustration: BALTIMORE ORIOLE AND NEST]
-
-As they go on building, the mother bird gets inside and turns around and
-around to make it fit her form, and be smooth and comfortable for her to
-sit in.
-
-When a nest is made, it must be lined. Then some birds go to the chicken
-yard, and pick up feathers, and others find horsehairs. Some of them
-pull off the soft down that grows on plants, or get bits of wool from
-the sheep pasture, or old leaves from the woods, and make it soft and
-warm inside.
-
-Some bird homes are only platforms, where it seems as if the eggs must
-roll off, and others are deep burrows, or holes in the ground, where no
-one can get in. Some are dainty baskets hung between two twigs, and
-others are tiny cups of felt with lichens outside.
-
-Each species of bird builds in its own way. There are as many different
-ways to make nests as there are kinds of birds to make them.
-
-Then after all the trouble birds have taken to build a nest, they seldom
-use it a second time. If a pair have two broods in a season, they almost
-always build a new one for each family.
-
-A few birds, such as eagles, owls, and sometimes orioles, and others,
-repair the home and use it again, and woodpeckers sometimes nest in the
-old holes. But generally, after the young birds have flown, we may be
-sure the nest will not be wanted again.
-
-When the nest is finished, the eggs are laid in it, one by one. We all
-know how pretty birds' eggs are. Some are snowy white, some are delicate
-pink, and some blue. Many have tiny dots and specks on them, and a few
-are covered with queer-looking streaks and lines. But pretty as they
-are, I think no one would be so cruel as to take them away from the poor
-little mother, if he remembered that her young ones are inside them, and
-that she loves them as his own mother loves him.
-
-I have heard people say that birds do not care for their eggs. Let me
-tell you what a little chickadee mother did when a man tried to steal
-the eggs out of her nest.
-
-The nest was in a hole in an old stump, and the man could not get his
-hand in, so he had to take them out one at a time with a little scoop.
-
-At first the mother flew at him and tried to drive him away. Then
-chickadees and other birds who lived near came to help her. All flew
-about his face with cries, so that he had to use one hand to keep them
-away from his eyes. But still he went on taking out the eggs.
-
-At last the little mother was so wild with grief that she dashed into
-the hole and sat there in the doorway, right before his face. He could
-not get another egg without hurting her, and he was ashamed to do that.
-
-This was as brave in the tiny creature as it would be for a human mother
-to throw herself before a fierce, hungry tiger. Do you think she did not
-care for her eggs?
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE BABY BIRD
-
-
-A BABY bird, as you know, always comes out of an egg. And beautiful as
-these eggs are, they are most interesting when you think that each one
-holds a tiny bird.
-
-Eggs are not all alike, of course. One the size of a bean is large
-enough to hold a hummingbird baby, till it is old enough to come out.
-But the young ostrich needs a shell nearly as big as your head. So there
-are all sizes of eggs to fit the different sizes of birds.
-
-If you should break a fresh egg you would not see a bird, for it would
-not be formed at that time. After the egg is laid in its soft bed, it
-has to be kept warm for many days, and that is why the mother bird sits
-on her nest so quietly. She is keeping the eggs warm, so that the little
-ones will form and grow, till they are as big as the shells can hold.
-
-While the mother is sitting her mate does all he can to help, though
-each species has its own way. The blue jay brings food to his mate, so
-that she need not leave the nest at all, and many others do so. But the
-kingbird father simply watches the nest to protect it while the mother
-goes for food. A redstart gets into the nest himself, to keep the eggs
-warm while his mate is gone, and a goldfinch coaxes his mate to go off
-with him for a lunch, leaving nest and eggs to take care of themselves.
-
-[Illustration: REDSTARTS (FEMALE ON NEST)]
-
-Another thing the father birds do is to sing. This is the time when we
-hear so much bird song. The singers have little to do but to wait, and
-so they please themselves, and their mates, and us too, by singing a
-great deal.
-
-When the little birds begin to be cramped, and find their cradle too
-tight, they peck at the shell with a sort of tooth that grows on the end
-of the beak, and is called the "egg tooth." This soon breaks the shell,
-and they come out. Then the mother or father carefully picks up the
-pieces of shell, carries them off, and throws them away, leaving only
-the little ones in the nest. Perhaps you have found these broken shells
-on the ground sometimes, and could not guess how they came there. When
-the birdlings break out of their prison they do not all look the same.
-Ducks and geese and chickens and quails, and other birds who live on
-the ground, as well as hawks and owls, are dressed in pretty suits of
-down. They have their eyes open, and the ground birds are ready to run
-about at once.
-
-A man who studied birds, once saw a young duck get its first suit of
-down. He picked up the egg just as the little bird inside was trying to
-get out. In a few minutes the shell fell apart, and out stepped the
-duckling on his hand. It seemed to be covered with coarse black hairs,
-which in a moment began to burst open, one by one, and out of each came
-a soft fluff of down. So in a few minutes, while the man stood there and
-held him, the little duck was all covered with his pretty dress.
-
-But most birds hatched in nests in trees and bushes, like robins and
-bluebirds, are very different. When they come out of their shells they
-are naked, have their eyes shut, and look as if they were nearly all
-mouth. A young hummingbird looks about as big as a honey bee, and a
-robin baby not much bigger than the eggshell he came out of.
-
-They lie flat down in the nest, seeming to be asleep most of the time.
-All they want is to be warm and to be fed.
-
-To keep them warm, the mother sits on them a great part of the time, and
-for the first few days of their lives, the father often brings most of
-the food. Sometimes he gives it to the mother, and she feeds the little
-ones. But sometimes she gets off the nest, and flies away to rest, and
-get something to eat for herself, while he feeds the nestlings.
-
-There is one bird father who--it is thought--never comes to the nest,
-either to watch the eggs or to help feed the nestlings. That is our
-hummingbird, the ruby throat.
-
-We do not know the reason for this, and it is not fair to say hard
-things about him until we do. It may be that he thinks his shining ruby
-would show the hiding-place of the nest, or it may be that the little
-mother is not willing to have any help. I think this last is the real
-reason, for she has a great deal of spirit, and always drives away
-others from her feeding-places.
-
-Young birds grow very fast, and soon feathers begin to come out all over
-them. They are not very pretty at this time.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-HOW HE IS FED
-
-
-SOON after the young bird comes out of the egg, he begins to be hungry.
-All day long, whenever the father or mother comes near, he opens his
-great mouth as wide as he can, to have it filled, and the moment he gets
-his voice he cries for food.
-
-Then the old birds have to work hard. Three or four hungry nestlings can
-keep both father and mother busy from morning till night, hunting for
-caterpillars and beetles and grubs and other things to feed them. It
-seems as if the little fellows never could get enough to eat. Each
-swallow baby wants seven or eight hundred small flies every day, and a
-baby robin needs more earthworms in a day than you can hold in your hand
-at once.
-
-At this time you will see robins hunting over the lawn, and carrying
-great beakfuls of worms up to the nest. Bluebirds you will find looking
-in the grass, and sparrows hopping about on the ground, all seeking
-soft worms and grubs and insects for the nestlings; and they are so busy
-they do not get much time for singing.
-
-[Illustration: RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD]
-
-At this time the orioles go all over the orchard trees looking for tiny
-worms, and little warblers seek them under every leaf.
-
-Woodpeckers find the insects hidden behind the bark of trees, by cutting
-holes through it. Chickadees and nuthatches pick the tiniest insect eggs
-out of the crevices, and flickers hunt everywhere for ants.
-
-As soon as one of the old birds has his mouth full, he flies to the nest
-to feed the young.
-
-But not all birds feed in the same way. A robin just drops a big
-earthworm, or a part of one, into the gaping baby mouth. Many other
-birds do so also. Sometimes, when an insect is too big or too hard, they
-beat it till it is soft, or break it up, before giving it to a little
-one.
-
-But hummingbird mothers and flicker mothers have a different way. When
-they collect the food they swallow it, as if they wanted it for
-themselves. Then they go to the nest, and jerk it up again in mouthfuls,
-and feed the nestlings. This is called feeding by "regurgitation," or
-"throwing up."
-
-The way they give the food is very curious. They push their long beaks
-into the nestling's throat, and poke the food far down; so the young
-one does not even have the trouble of swallowing.
-
-This looks as if it must hurt, but the nestling seems to like it, and is
-always ready for more. The pigeon mother lets the young one poke his
-beak down her throat, and get the food for himself.
-
-If the food is hard, like corn, birds who feed in this way let it stay
-in the crop till it is soft and better fitted for tender throats, before
-they give it out.
-
-It is comical to see a nest full of little birds when the father or
-mother comes with food. All stretch up and open their big mouths as wide
-as they can, and if they are old enough, they cry as if they were
-starving.
-
-Some birds bring food enough for all in the nest, every time they come.
-A cedar-bird, feeding wild cherries, brought five of them every time,
-one for each of the five nestlings. One cherry was held in his mouth,
-but the other four were down his throat, and had to be jerked up one by
-one.
-
-Other birds bring only one mouthful at a time, and when there are five
-or six in the nest, they have to make as many journeys before all are
-fed.
-
-Some persons who have studied birds think that each nestling is fed in
-its turn; but they look so much alike, and are so close together, that
-it is hard to tell, and I am not sure that it is so.
-
-I will tell you a story I have heard about feeding little birds. A child
-picked up a young goldfinch who had fallen out of the nest. He took him
-home and put him into the canary's cage, which was hanging on the front
-porch.
-
-Soon the family heard a great noise among the birds, and went out to see
-what was the matter. The baby goldfinch had hopped on to a perch in the
-cage, and seemed to be afraid to come down, though the old birds had
-brought food for him, and were calling him to take it.
-
-The canary looked on a while, and then all at once he flew to the wires
-and took the food from the birds outside; then he went back to the perch
-beside the little one and gave it to him. This he did many times.
-
-The next day another young goldfinch was picked up and put in the cage,
-and the canary took food from the parents and fed both.
-
-After a few days the old birds came with a third little one, and as all
-were now old enough to fly, the cage door was opened, and they all flew
-away.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-HIS FIRST SUIT
-
-
-SOME birds that live on the ground--as I told you--have dresses of down
-to begin with. These little fellows have no warm nest to stay in, but
-run around almost as soon as they come out of the egg. Young ducks and
-geese wear this baby suit for weeks, before they begin to put on their
-feather coats.
-
-Young birds that spend most of their time in the water, like grebes, and
-others that live in a cold country, have the down very thick and fine,
-like heavy underclothes, to keep them dry and warm.
-
-Birds whose home is underground, like the kingfisher, or in the trunk of
-a tree, like the woodpecker, have hardly any down at all. They need no
-baby clothes in their warm cradles.
-
-Robins and most other song birds have only a little down on them, and
-very soon the feathers begin to grow.
-
-When the tiny quills push themselves up, they look like little white
-pins sticking out all over. Each bit of down grows out of a little
-raised place on the skin that looks like a pimple, and the feather comes
-out of the same.
-
-[Illustration: YOUNG WOOD THRUSH]
-
-As the feather grows, the bit of down clings to it till it is broken
-off. Sometimes it holds on till the feather is well out. We can often
-see down sticking to a young bird's feathers.
-
-The little feathers grow very fast, and before he is ready to fly a
-young bird is well covered. Birds hatched with their eyes open, and
-already dressed, who have to run and fly very soon, get their wing
-feathers early; but birds who live many days in the nest, like robins
-and bluebirds, do not get theirs till they are nearly grown.
-
-The tail feathers are the last to come to full length, and you will
-notice that most birds just out of the nest have very dumpy tails.
-
-A bird's first suit of feathers is called his nestling plumage. In some
-families it is just like the dress of the grown-up birds, but in others
-it is not at all like that. It is usually worn only a few weeks, for the
-young one outgrows it, and needs a new and bigger one before winter.
-
-When a bird is fully dressed, his body is entirely covered, and it looks
-as if the feathers grew close to each other all over him. But it is not
-so. The feathers grow in patterns, called "feather tracts," with
-spaces of bare skin between them. These bare places do not show, because
-the feathers lap over each other and cover them.
-
-The pattern of the feather tracts is not the same in all birds. A few
-birds of the Ostrich family have feathers all over the body.
-
-There is another curious thing about the nestling plumage. You would
-expect a young bird to look like his father or mother; and some of them
-do. Many nestlings are dressed exactly like their mothers; and not until
-they are a year old do the young males get a coat like their father's.
-Some of them, indeed, do not have their grown-up suits for two or three
-years.
-
-Then, again, many young birds have dresses different from both parents.
-Young robins have speckled breasts, and spots on the shoulders, which
-the old birds have not.
-
-When the father and mother are dressed alike, as the song sparrows are,
-the young birds generally differ from both of them. When the father and
-mother are different, like orioles or bluebirds, the young are usually
-like the mother the first season. In some cases the father, mother, and
-young are almost exactly alike.
-
-Birds who live on the ground need dresses of dull colors, or they would
-not be very safe. The ostrich mother, who makes her nest in plain sight
-on the sand, is dressed in grayish brown. When she sits on the eggs, she
-lays her long neck flat on the ground before her; then she looks like
-one of the ant-hills that are common on the plains of Africa, where she
-lives.
-
-The South American ostrich, or rhea, fluffs out her feathers and looks
-like a heap of dry grass. The male ostrich is dressed in showy black and
-white, and he stays away all day, but takes care of the nest at night,
-when his striking colors cannot be seen.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-HOW HE CHANGES HIS CLOTHES
-
-
-IT takes a bird weeks to put on a new suit of clothes. He has nothing
-but his feathers to protect him from cold and wet, and as feathers
-cannot grow out in a minute, he would be left naked, and suffer, if he
-lost them all at once. So he changes his dress one or two feathers at a
-time.
-
-Some day a feather will drop from each wing. If you could look, you
-would see that new ones had started out in the same place, and pushed
-the old ones off. When the new ones are pretty well grown another pair
-will fall out.
-
-If all dropped out at once, besides suffering with cold he would not be
-able to fly, and he could not get his living, and anybody could catch
-him. But losing only one from each side at a time, he always has enough
-to fly with.
-
-It is the same way with his tail feathers. He loses them in pairs, one
-from each side at the same time.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN GOLDFINCH]
-
-The soft feathers that cover his body drop out one by one. Thus all the
-time he is putting on a new suit he still wears part of the old one. In
-this way he is never left without clothes for a moment.
-
-Most birds put on their new suits just after the young ones are grown
-up, and before they all start for the South to spend the winter,--that
-is, with many of our common birds, in August. At that time they are
-rather shy, and stop singing. If you did not see one now and then, you
-might think they were all gone.
-
-Sometimes the new fall suit is not at all like the old one. There is the
-goldfinch, all summer in bright yellow. When he comes out in his new
-suit in August, it is dull-colored, much like the one his mate wears all
-the year, and in winter, when goldfinches fly around in little flocks,
-they look nearly all alike.
-
-In the spring, the male goldfinch comes out again in yellow. He has two
-suits a year,--a bright yellow one in the spring, and a dull olive-green
-for the winter. But his new spring dress is not a full suit. The yellow
-of the body is all fresh, but the black wings are the same the year
-round.
-
-Some birds have two, different colored dresses in a year; one they get
-without changing a feather. Suppose they have feathers of black, with
-gray on the outside edges. All winter the gray shows and the birds seem
-to have gray coats. But in spring the gray edges wear or fall off, and
-the black shows, and then they look as if they had come out in new black
-suits. It is as if you should take off a gray overcoat and show a black
-coat under it.
-
-There is another interesting thing about birds' dress. Some of them look
-like their mates, the father and mother birds so nearly alike that it is
-hard, sometimes impossible, to tell them apart. But when that is the
-case, you will notice that the color is not very gay. If the father
-wears a bright-colored suit, the mother does not look like him.
-
-For this reason the little mother is not too easily seen when she is on
-her nest. If the goldfinch mother were as bright as her mate, everybody
-who came near would see her on the nest, and some animal might take her,
-and leave the young birds to starve to death. That is probably why
-mother birds dress in such dull colors.
-
-When birds live on the ground, or very near it, in most cases both of
-the pair wear the dull colors, so they will not easily be seen. Wrens
-and sparrows and many others are so. But birds who make their nests in
-holes, or under ground, are often as bright as their mates, because
-they cannot be seen while sitting, and do not need to wear dull colors.
-
-A curious thing about a bird's color is that the same species, or kind
-of bird, is darker in one place than another. Where there is much
-dampness or wet weather, the colors are darker. For instance, a
-bob-white who lives in Florida, or one who lives in Oregon, will be much
-darker than his cousin living in New England.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-HIS FIRST FLIGHT
-
-
-WHEN young birds are in the nest they are not very pretty. But when they
-are nearly feathered, and sit up on the edge, exercising their wings,
-and getting ready to fly, they are lovely to look at. Their feathers are
-more fluffy and fresh than those of the old birds.
-
-At that time they have not learned to be afraid of us, and if we do not
-frighten them by roughness, loud talking, or quick movements, we can
-often get near enough to see them well. They will sit up and look at us
-without fear.
-
-Then some day, all at once, a young bird will begin to flap his wings,
-and off he will go, fluttering very hard, beating his wings, and trying
-to reach the next tree.
-
-Sometimes he will reach it, and perch on a twig, and sit quite still a
-long time, tired with his first flight. Then the parents will come and
-feed him, and after a while he will fly again. This time he will go
-farther.
-
-So he will go on, till in a few days he can fly very well, and follow
-his parents about, and begin to learn where to get food.
-
-Sometimes when a young bird leaves the nest he does not reach the tree
-he starts for, but falls to the ground. Then there is trouble among the
-birds. He is in danger of being picked up by a cat or a boy, or of
-getting tangled in the grass or weeds.
-
-The poor parents are half wild with fear. They coax him to try again,
-and they follow him about in the grass, in great distress. I have many
-times picked up a little bird, and set him on a branch of a tree, or
-stood guard over him, driving away cats and keeping off people, till he
-reached a place where he would be safe.
-
-When young birds are out, but cannot yet fly very well, there is much
-anxiety about them. Then, if any one comes around to disturb them, what
-can the poor little mother do? Sometimes she makes her young ones hide.
-Some of the birds who live on the ground will give a certain cry, when
-in a second every little one will crouch on the ground, or creep under a
-leaf, and be perfectly still. And their dark colors look so like the
-earth one can hardly see them.
-
-Then the mother tries to make one look at her by queer antics. She
-pretends to be hurt, and tumbles about as if she could not fly. If it
-is a man or an animal who has frightened her, he will usually think he
-can easily catch her; so he will forget about the young ones, and follow
-her as she goes fluttering over the ground. She will go on playing that
-she is hurt, and moving away, till she leads him far from her brood.
-Then she will start up and fly away, and he cannot find his way back to
-where the little ones are still crouching.
-
-Sometimes when a mother is frightened, she will snatch up her young one
-between her feet, and fly away with it. Sometimes a mother will fight,
-actually fly into the face of the one she fears. Often, too, other birds
-come to her aid; birds of many kinds,--catbirds, robins, thrashers, and
-others,--all come to help her drive away the enemy, for birds are almost
-always ready to help each other.
-
-I once found a young blue jay who had come to the ground while trying
-his first flight. I thought I would pick him up and put him on a branch.
-But the old birds did not know what I meant to do, and perhaps they were
-afraid I would carry him off.
-
-They flew at me with loud cries to drive me away, and I thought it best
-to go, for I did not want to make them any more unhappy than they were
-already.
-
-I did not go far, because I wanted to see that no one caught the little
-one. He hopped about in the grass a long time, while his parents flew
-around him in great distress. Many times he tried to fly, but he could
-not rise more than two feet from the ground.
-
-At last he seemed to make up his mind to climb a tree, for when he came
-to one with a rough bark he began to go up. He would fly up a few
-inches, then hold on with his claws to rest. And so, half flying and
-half climbing, he went on till he reached the lowest limb. On that he
-perched and was quiet, glad to rest after his hard work. The old birds
-were happy, too, and brought food to him, and so I left them.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-HIS EDUCATION
-
-
-THE young bird has to be educated, or trained for his life, just as we
-do, though not exactly in the same way.
-
-He does not have to know arithmetic and history; and what he needs of
-geography is only the road to the South, where he spends his winters.
-
-I suppose the first thing he learns is to fly. You have heard, perhaps,
-that the old birds drive their young out of the nest. But do not believe
-any such thing, for it is not true. I have seen many little birds leave
-the nest, and almost every one flew when the parents were away after
-food.
-
-The parents sometimes try to coax a nestling who is afraid to try his
-wings, like an oriole I knew of. All the young orioles had flown except
-this one, and he seemed to be too timid to try. He stood on the edge of
-the nest, and called and cried, but did not use his wings.
-
-The father came to see him now and then, and at last he made him fly in
-this way. He caught a fine, large moth, and brought it to the nest in
-his beak. The young bird was very hungry, and when he saw the food, he
-opened his mouth and fluttered his wings, so eager to get it he could
-hardly wait.
-
-But the parent did not feed him. He let him see the moth, and then, with
-a loud call, he flew to the next tree. When the little oriole saw the
-food going away, he forgot he was afraid, and with a cry of horror he
-sprang after it; and so, before he knew it, he had flown.
-
-After the young bird can fly, he needs to be taught to get his own
-living, or to find his own food, and also where to sleep. Then he must
-learn what to be afraid of, and how to protect himself from his enemies.
-
-He needs to know the different calls and cries of his family, and what
-they all mean. He has to learn to fly in a flock with other birds, and
-he must learn to sing. No doubt there are many more lessons for him that
-we do not know about.
-
-If you watch little birds just out of the nest, you may see them being
-taught the most useful and important lesson, how to find their food.
-
-The robin mother takes her little one to the ground, and shows him
-where the worms live and how to get them. The owl mother finds a mouse
-creeping about in the grass, and teaches the owlets how to pounce upon
-it, by doing it herself before them.
-
-The old swallow takes her youngsters into the air, and shows them how to
-catch little flies on the wing; while mother phoebe teaches hers to sit
-still and watch till a fly comes near, and then fly out and catch it.
-
-If you watch long enough, after a while you may see the old bird, who is
-training a young one, fly away. She may leave the young one alone on a
-tree or the ground, and be gone a long time.
-
-Before many minutes the little one will get hungry, and begin to call
-for food. But by and by, if nobody comes to feed him, he will think to
-look around for something to eat. Thus he will get his lesson in helping
-himself.
-
-Once I saw a woodpecker father bring his little one to a fence, close by
-some raspberry bushes that were full of berries. He fed him two or three
-berries, to teach him what they were and where they grew, and then
-quietly slipped away.
-
-When the young bird began to feel hungry he cried out; but nobody came.
-Then he looked over at the raspberries, and reached out and tried to
-get hold of one. After trying three or four times, and nearly pitching
-off his perch, he did reach one. Then how proud he was!
-
-The father stayed away an hour or more, and before he came back that
-young woodpecker had learned to help himself very well; though the
-minute his father came, he began to flutter his wings and beg to be fed,
-as if he were half starved.
-
-A lady, who fed the wild birds on her window sill for many years, and
-watched their ways, says she often saw the old birds teaching their
-little ones. They showed them where the food was to be found, and, she
-says, regularly taught them the art of eating.
-
-Then she saw them taught to be afraid of people, not to come too near
-her. And once she saw an old bird showing a young one how to gather
-twigs for nest-building. The young one looked on a while, and then tried
-hard to do it himself, but could not get off a single twig.
-
-Best of all, the same lady heard an old robin giving a music lesson. The
-teacher would sing a few notes and then stop, while the pupil tried to
-copy them. He had a weak, babyish sort of voice, and did not succeed
-very well at first.
-
-I have heard several birds at their music lessons.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-SOME OF HIS LESSONS
-
-
-IT is very easy to catch the birds teaching their little ones to
-exercise their wings and to fly together. You will see the young birds
-sitting quietly on fences or trees, when all at once the parents begin
-to fly around, with strange loud calls. In a minute every youngster will
-fly out and join them. Around and around they all go, hard as they can,
-till their little wings are tired, and then they come down and alight
-again.
-
-Once I saw a young bird who did not go when his parents called. All the
-others flew around many times, and I suppose that young one thought he
-would not be noticed.
-
-But mothers' eyes are sharp, and his mother saw him. So when she came
-back, she flew right at her naughty son, and knocked him off his perch.
-The next time she called, he flew with the rest. This was a crow mother.
-
-I have seen a bluebird just out of the nest, taught to follow his
-father in this way. He stood on a small tree, crying for something to
-eat, when his father came in sight with a beakful of food. He did not
-feed him, but flew past him, so close that he almost touched him, and
-alighted on the next tree, a little beyond him.
-
-[Illustration: BLUEBIRD]
-
-The little bluebird saw the food, and at once flew after it, perched
-beside his father, and was fed. Then the old bird left him, and in a few
-minutes he felt hungry, and began to call again.
-
-I kept close watch, and soon the father came and did the same thing
-over. He flew past the young one with an insect in plain sight in his
-beak, and perched on another tree still farther along in the way he
-wanted the little one to go.
-
-The hungry baby followed, and was fed as before. In this way he was led
-to a big tree the other side of the yard, where the rest of the family
-were, and where they all spent the night.
-
-An old robin wanted to teach her young one to bathe. She brought him to
-a dish of water kept for their use by some people who were fond of
-birds. The little one stood on the edge and watched his mother go in,
-and splash and scatter the water. He fluttered his wings, and was
-eager to try it for himself, but seemed afraid to plunge in.
-
-At last the mother flew away and left him standing there, and in a
-moment came back with a worm in her mouth. The young robin was hungry,
-as young birds always are, and when he saw the worm, he began to flutter
-his wings, and cry for it.
-
-But the mother jumped into the middle of the water dish, and stood
-there, holding the worm in his sight. The youngster wanted the worm so
-much that he seemed to forget his fear of the water, and hopped right in
-beside her. She fed him, and then began to splash about, and he liked it
-so well that he stayed and took a good bath.
-
-Birds, as these stories show, teach their little ones by coaxing, and
-not by driving them.
-
-An Englishman, Mr. Lloyd Morgan, once had some ducks and chickens
-hatched away from their mother, to see how much their parents had to
-teach them.
-
-He found that these little orphans had to be taught to pick up their
-food, and to know what is good to eat. He had to show the young ducks
-how to dive, and teach all of them that water is good to drink.
-
-To see if chickens had to be taught the hen language, he put them out
-by their mother when they were a few days old.
-
-The hen was going about with her brood, all brothers and sisters of Mr.
-Morgan's chicks, and she was quite ready to adopt the new ones. She
-clucked and called to them with all her might, but they did not come.
-They acted as if they did not hear her. When the others ran and crept
-under her wings to be brooded, the strangers looked on, but did not
-think of going too.
-
-They did not understand the calls or the ways of their own mother. They
-had not been taught.
-
-A careful watcher will see the birds teach these things, and many others
-as interesting. But no one will see anything unless he is quiet, and
-does not frighten them.
-
-
-
-
-THE BIRD GROWN UP
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-THE BIRD'S LANGUAGE
-
-
-WHEN the bird is grown up, there are many other interesting things to
-know about him,--one is, whether he can talk.
-
-It is plain to those who have studied the ways of birds, that they are
-able to tell things to each other, and many writers have said plainly
-that birds have a language.
-
-If you notice birds in cages, you will find that when two or more of a
-kind are in the same room, you will hear little chirps and twitters and
-other notes, not at all like their song. But if one is alone in a room,
-he hardly makes a sound except when singing.
-
-Then see a robin out of doors. He is less afraid of us than most birds,
-and easiest to watch. If something comes up on him suddenly, he gives a
-sharp note of surprise. If a cat appears, he has another cry which every
-one can understand, a word of warning to all. If everything is quiet and
-his mate is near, he will greet her with some low, sweet notes.
-
-When a partridge mother sees danger, she gives one call, which all her
-brood know, and at once run and hide. When the hen speaks to her chicks,
-they know well whether it means to come to her, or to run away.
-
-Of course birds do not use our words. When it is said that the quail
-says "Bob White," it is meant that his call sounds like those words. To
-some the notes sound like "more wet." One may call it almost anything,
-like "all right" or "too hot."
-
-You will read in books about birds, that a certain warbler says "Witches
-here," or that the white-throated sparrow says "Old Sam Peabody," and
-other birds say still different things. The writer means that the words
-remind one of the bird's notes, and so it is useful to know them,
-because it helps you to know the bird when you hear him.
-
-I have many times seen birds act as if they were talking to each other.
-You can often see the city sparrows do so.
-
-There is nothing in a bird's ways that we like so well as his singing.
-And in all the many species of birds in the world, no two sing exactly
-alike, so far as I can find out. You may always know a bird by his song.
-A robin does not sing like a thrush or a catbird. And what is more, not
-one of the sounds he utters is like those made by any other bird. If you
-know him well, whatever noise he makes, you will know at once that it is
-a robin.
-
-But there is something still more curious about it. No robin sings
-exactly like another robin. When you come to know one bird well, you can
-tell his song from any other bird's. Of course, all robins sing enough
-alike for one to know that it is a robin song, but if you listen
-closely, you will see that it is really different from all others.
-
-Persons who have kept birds in cages have noticed the same thing.
-
-There is still another point to know. One bird does not always sing the
-same song. I have heard a song sparrow sing five or six different songs,
-standing all the time in plain sight on a fence. In the same way I have
-known a meadowlark to make six changes in his few notes.
-
-Besides their own natural songs, many birds like to copy the notes of
-others. Our mockingbird is very fond of learning new things, and he does
-not always choose songs either.
-
-He will imitate the noise of filing a saw, or the pop of a cork, as
-readily as the sweetest song. I have heard one sing the canary's song
-better than the canary himself.
-
-[Illustration: INDIGO-BIRD]
-
-Other birds can do the same. A common English sparrow picked up in the
-streets of a big city, hurt, and not able to fly, was put into a room
-with a canary.
-
-No doubt the wild bird found his life in a cage rather dull, after
-having been used to the streets, and he soon began to amuse himself
-trying to do as the canary did, to sing. In a few weeks he learned the
-whole song, and he could sing it even better than his roommate, for his
-voice was full and rich, and not so shrill as the canary's.
-
-Most people think that birds sing all summer. They think so because they
-have not taken notice. We who are very fond of bird song know it is not
-so.
-
-Singing begins when the birds first come in the spring. It goes on while
-the nest is being built, and the mother bird is sitting. The father has
-little to do at that time, and so he sings. And besides, he seems to be
-so happy that he cannot help it.
-
-But when little ones begin to call for food, he has to be very busy, and
-does not have so much time for music. Some birds stop singing as soon as
-they go to feeding.
-
-But not all do so. Many go on singing till they begin to change their
-clothes, or to moult, as it is called. This happens in August or
-September, and when it begins, a bird seems to lose his voice.
-
-One of the first to stop singing is the bobolink. He is rarely heard
-after June is past. The veery is another whose singing days are over
-early. You may hear his call in the woods, if you know it, but not a
-song will you hear after the middle of July.
-
-By the time August comes in, almost every bird is silent, except for his
-calls or "talk." The birds to be heard then are the red-eyed vireo, who
-seems never to tire, and now and then the indigo-bird, or the wood
-pewee, and best of all, the dear little song sparrow, who keeps up his
-cheery songs till the very last.
-
-Then you will know that all the birds are busy putting on their new
-suits for their long journey.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-WHAT HE EATS
-
-
-WHAT the bird eats and where he gets his food are useful things for us
-to know. It has only lately been found out that birds are the most
-valuable of helpers to us.
-
-What we cannot eat ourselves, they are happy to live on, and things that
-make us a great deal of trouble are their daily food.
-
-Some of the things they are fond of are little animals, like mice and
-ground squirrels, that eat our crops. Others are insects which spoil our
-fruit and eat up our vegetables, cankerworms and cutworms, and a hundred
-more.
-
-Besides these, many birds eat the seeds of certain weeds that farmers
-have to fight all the time.
-
-One reason this helps us so greatly is that birds eat much more for
-their size than we do. A boy of six or eight years could not possibly
-eat a whole sheep in one day, but a young bird can easily eat more than
-his own weight every day.
-
-They want more than three meals too. They need to eat very often. One
-catbird will take thirty grasshoppers for his breakfast, and in a few
-hours he will want thirty more. So he destroys a great many in a day.
-
-Birds begin eating long before we are out of bed, and keep it up till
-night comes again, or as long as they can see.
-
-You must not think the birds are greedy, as a person would be if he ate
-every few minutes all day. They are made to do so. It is their business
-to destroy insects, small animals, and weeds that trouble us so much,
-and the more they eat the better for us.
-
-Let us see where they go for food. Each bird has his own place to work.
-
-The catbird watches the fruit-trees, and all day long eats insects that
-are spoiling our fruit or killing the trees. When the cherries are ripe,
-we should not forget that he has saved the fruit from insects, and has
-well earned a share for himself.
-
-If you spent days and weeks picking off insects, would you not think you
-had earned part of the fruit? "For every cherry he eats" (says a man who
-has watched him), "he has eaten at least one thousand insects."
-
-The robin eats great numbers of cankerworms, which destroy our apples,
-and cutworms, which kill the corn.
-
-The bluebird sits on the fence keeping sharp watch, and every few
-minutes flies down and picks up a grasshopper or a cricket, or some such
-grass-eating insect.
-
-Woodpeckers hunt over the trunks and limbs of trees. They tap on the
-bark and listen, and if they hear a grub stir inside, they cut a hole in
-the bark and drag it out. The downy is fond of insects that infest our
-apple-trees, and he makes many holes in the trunks. But it does not hurt
-the trees. It is good for them, for it takes away the creatures that
-were eating them.
-
-Orioles go over the fruit-trees, and pick out tiny insects under the
-leaves, and when they find great nests on the branches, they tear them
-open and kill the caterpillars that made them.
-
-Little warblers, such as the pretty summer yellow-bird, help to keep our
-trees clear, doing most of their work in the tops, where we can hardly
-see them.
-
-Swallows fly about in the air, catching mosquitoes and tiny flies that
-trouble us.
-
-Very useful to us are the birds who feed upon dead animals, such as the
-turkey buzzards, who may be seen any day in our Southern States,
-soaring about high in the air, looking for their food.
-
-What they eat is so very unpleasant to us that we are apt to despise the
-birds. But we should cherish and feel grateful to them instead. For they
-are doing us the greatest kindness. In many of the hot countries people
-could not live, if these most useful birds were killed.
-
-Some persons think buzzards find their food by seeing it, and others are
-just as sure that they smell it. Perhaps they use both senses.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-MORE ABOUT HIS FOOD
-
-
-SOME of the big birds work all the time for us. When you see a hawk
-sitting very still on a dead limb, what do you suppose he is doing?
-
-A good deal of the time he is looking on the ground for a mouse, or a
-ground squirrel, or a rat, or some creature that he likes to eat.
-
-When he sees one of them move in the grass, he flies down and pounces
-upon it. Thus he helps the farmer greatly, for all of these little
-animals destroy crops.
-
-When it grows dark, hawks stop work and go to sleep. Then the owls, who
-can see better in the dusk, come out of the holes where they have been
-half sleeping all day. They hunt the same little creatures, most of all
-rats and mice, which like best to run about in the night.
-
-Perhaps you have heard that hawks and owls carry off chickens. Many
-people who keep chickens shoot every hawk and owl they see. But if they
-knew more about them they would not do so. Only two of the common hawks
-and one owl[1] disturb chickens. All the others kill thousands of the
-little animals that give the farmers so much trouble.
-
-Owls have a curious way of eating mice. They swallow them whole, and
-after a while they throw up a queer-looking little ball made of the
-bones and fur of the mouse.
-
-You may some time have seen a long-legged heron walking about on the
-seashore or in the salt marsh. Now and then he would thrust his long,
-sharp bill into something, and lift up his head and swallow. Or you have
-noticed a little sandpiper running along on the beach or the bank of a
-river.
-
-The heron was probably eating frogs or fish, and the sandpiper some of
-the small sea creatures thrown up by the waves. If these were not taken
-away they would be very bad for us, and perhaps make us sick.
-
-Not less useful to us than these birds are the whole family of finches.
-The goldfinch in bright yellow coat, the purple finch in red, and the
-sparrows in plain brown. All of these are fond of seeds as well as
-insects, and most of all they like the seeds of some weeds that are hard
-to get rid of.
-
-The goldfinch is called the thistle-bird, because he likes best the
-seeds of thistles, though he eats the beggar's-ticks too.
-
-The chipping sparrow, the little red-headed bird who comes about our
-doors, eats the seeds of fox-tail and crab grasses, that spoil our
-lawns.
-
-The white-throated sparrow, a large and very pretty bird, eats the seeds
-of smartweed and ragweed. Other finches like bittersweet, sorrel, and
-amaranth, all of which we are glad to have them eat.
-
-The seed-eating birds can find their food in winter, even when snow
-covers the ground, because the dead weeds hold on to their seeds, and
-the snow is not often deep enough to cover them.
-
-Some birds gather their food in the fall, and hide it away where they
-can find it in winter. Blue jays collect acorns and beech-nuts, and
-store them in a hole in a tree, or some other safe place, to eat when
-food is scarce. A woodpecker who lives in the West picks holes in the
-bark of a tree, and puts an acorn into each one.
-
-The oddest store I know of was made by a woodpecker. He found a long
-crack in a post, and stuffed it full of live grasshoppers. He did not
-like dead grasshoppers. He wedged them into the crack so tightly that
-they could not get out, and I do not know that they wanted to. When
-grasshoppers were scarce in the fields, he came day after day to his
-queer storehouse, till he had eaten every one.
-
-One of the woodpecker family who lives in Mexico stores nuts and acorns
-in the stems of plants. These stems are hollow and made in joints like
-bamboo. The bird cuts a hole at the upper end of a joint, and stuffs it
-full. When he wants his nuts, he cuts a hole at the lower end of the
-joint and pulls them out.
-
-I once had a tame blue jay, who was fond of saving what he could not
-eat, and putting it safely away. The place he seemed to think most
-secure was somewhere about me, and he would come slyly around me as I
-sat at work, and try to hide his treasure about my clothes.
-
-When it was a dried currant or bit of bread, I did not care; but when he
-came on to my shoulder, and tried to tuck a dead meal worm into my hair
-or between my lips, or a piece of raw beef under a ruffle or in my ear,
-I had to decline to be used as a storehouse, much to his grief.
-
-He liked to put away other things as well as food. Matches he seemed to
-think were made for him to hide. His chosen place for them was between
-the breadths of matting on the floor.
-
-Once he found a parlor match, hunted up a good opening, and put it in.
-Then he went on, as he always did, to hammer it down so tightly that it
-would stay. One of the blows of his hard beak struck the lighting end of
-the match, and it went off with a sharp crack. The noise and the flame
-which burst out made the bird jump three feet, and scared him nearly out
-of his senses.
-
-After that I took care to keep the matches out of the way of a bird so
-fond of hiding things.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] Cooper's and sharp-shinned hawks, and great horned or hoot owl.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-WHERE HE SLEEPS
-
-
-MOST birds sleep on their feet.
-
-You know how a canary goes to sleep, all puffed out like a ball, with
-his head buried in the feathers of his shoulder. He may stick his bill
-over behind the top of the wing, but he never "puts his head under his
-wing," as you have heard.
-
-Sometimes he stands straight up on one leg, with the other drawn up out
-of sight in his feathers, but more often he sits down on the perch,
-still resting on his feet. Most wild birds of the perching kind sleep in
-the same way.
-
-It is only lately that we have begun to find out where birds sleep,
-because it is dark when they go to bed, and they get up before it is
-light enough for us to see them.
-
-The only way to catch them in bed is to go out in the evening, and start
-them up after they have gone to sleep. And this is not very kind to the
-poor little birds. Some men who are trying to learn about the habits of
-birds have tried this way, and so have found out some of their
-sleeping-places.
-
-One thing they have learned is that the nest is not often used for a
-bed, except for the mother, while she is sitting and keeping her little
-ones warm.
-
-Robins and orioles, and others, creep into the thick branches of an
-evergreen tree, close up to the trunk. Some crawl under the edge of a
-haystack, others into thick vines or thorny bushes. All these are meant
-for hiding-places, so that beasts which prowl about at night, and like
-to eat birds, will not find them.
-
-Tree sparrows like to sleep in holes in the ground like little caves.
-The men who found these cosy little bedrooms think they are places dug
-out by field mice, and other small animals, for their own use. And when
-they are left, the birds are glad to take them.
-
-When the weather is cold, some birds sleep under the snow. You may think
-that would not be very warm, and it is not so warm as a bed in the house
-with plenty of blankets. But it is much warmer than a perch in a tree,
-with nothing but leaves to keep off the wind.
-
-While the snow is falling, some birds find it as good as blankets for
-their use. Grouse, who live on the ground, dive into a snow-bank, and
-snuggle down quietly, while the snow falls and covers them all over, and
-keeps the cold wind off. Air comes through the snow, so they do not
-smother.
-
-Some birds creep into a pile of brush that is covered with snow, and
-find under the twigs little places like tents, where the snow has been
-kept out by the twigs, and they sleep there, away from the wind and
-storm outside.
-
-Water birds find the best sleeping-places on the water, where they float
-all night like tiny boats. Some of them leave one foot hanging down and
-paddling a little, while they sleep, to keep from being washed to the
-shore.
-
-Bob-white and his family sleep in a close circle on the ground, all with
-their heads turned outward, so that they can see or hear an enemy,
-whichever way he comes.
-
-Hawks and eagles are said to sleep standing, never sitting on the feet
-like a canary. Some ducks and geese do even more: they sleep standing on
-one foot. Woodpeckers and chimney swifts hang themselves up by their
-claws, using their stiff tail for a brace, as if it were a third leg.
-
-Some birds, like the crows, sleep in great flocks. They agree upon a
-piece of woods, and all the crows for miles around come there every
-night. Sometimes thousands sleep in this one bedroom, called a crow
-roost. Robins do the same, after the young are big enough to fly so far.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN ROBIN]
-
-Audubon, who has told us so much about birds, once found a hollow tree
-which was the sleeping-room of chimney swifts. The noise they made going
-out in the morning was like the roar of a great mill-wheel.
-
-He wanted to see the birds asleep. So in the daytime, when they were
-away, he had a piece cut out at the foot of the tree, big enough to let
-him in, and then put back, so the birds would not notice anything
-unusual.
-
-At night, after the swifts were abed, he took a dark lantern and went
-in. He turned the light upon them little by little, so as not to startle
-them. Then he saw the whole inside of the tree full of birds. They were
-hanging by their claws, side by side, as thick as they could hang. He
-thought there were as many as twelve thousand in that one bedroom.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-HIS TRAVELS
-
-
-MOST of our birds take two long journeys every year, one in the fall to
-the south, and the other in the spring back to the north. These journeys
-are called "migrations."
-
-The birds do not go all at once, but in many cases those of a kind who
-live near each other collect in a flock and travel together. Each
-species or kind has its own time to go.
-
-It might be thought that it is because of the cold that so many birds
-move to a warmer climate. But it is not so; they are very well dressed
-to endure cold. Their feather suits are so warm that some of our
-smallest and weakest birds are able to stay with us, like the chickadee
-and the golden-crowned kinglet. It is simply because they cannot get
-food in winter, that they have to go.
-
-The fall travel begins soon after the first of July. The bobolink is one
-of the first to leave us, though he does not start at once on his long
-journey. By that time his little folk are full grown, and can take care
-of themselves, and he is getting on his winter suit, or moulting.
-
-Then some morning all the bobolinks in the country are turned out of
-their homes in the meadows, by men and horses and mowing-machines, for
-at that time the long grass is ready to cut.
-
-Then he begins to think about the wild rice which is getting just right
-to eat. Besides, he likes to take his long journey to South America in
-an easy way, stopping here and there as he goes. So some morning we miss
-his cheerful call, and if we go to the meadow we shall not be able to
-see a single bobolink.
-
-There, too, are the swallows, who eat only small flying insects. As the
-weather grows cooler, these tiny flies are no longer to be found. So the
-swallows begin to flock, as it is called. For a few days they will be
-seen on fences and telegraph wires, chattering and making a great noise,
-and then some morning they will all be gone.
-
-They spend some time in marshes, and other lonely places, before they at
-last set out for the south.
-
-As the days grow shorter and cooler, the warblers go. These are the
-bright-colored little fellows, who live mostly in the tops of trees.
-Then the orioles and the thrushes and the cuckoos leave us, and most
-birds who live on insects.
-
-By the time that November comes in, few of them will be left. Birds who
-can live on seeds and winter berries, such as cedar-berries and
-partridge-berries, and others, often stay with us,--bluebirds, finches,
-and sometimes robins.
-
-Many birds take their journey by night. Think of it! Tiny creatures,
-that all summer go to bed at dark, start off some night, when it seems
-as if they ought to be asleep, and fly all night in the dark.
-
-When it grows light, they stop in some place where they can feed and
-rest. And the next night, or two or three nights later, they go on
-again. So they do till they reach their winter home, hundreds or
-thousands of miles away.
-
-These night flyers are the timid birds, and those who live in the woods,
-and do not like to be seen,--thrushes, wrens, vireos, and others. Birds
-with strong wings, who are used to flying hours every day, and bolder
-birds, who do not mind being seen, take their journey by daylight.
-
-Most of them stop now and then, a day or two at a time, to feed and
-rest. They fly very high, and faster than our railroad trains can go.
-
-In the spring the birds take their second long journey, back to their
-last year's home.
-
-How they know their way on these journeys, men have been for many years
-trying to find out. They have found that birds travel on regular roads,
-or routes, that follow the rivers and the shore of the ocean. They can
-see much better than we can, and even in the night they can see water.
-
-One such road, or highway, is over the harbor of New York. When the
-statue of Liberty was set up on an island in the harbor a few years ago,
-it was put in the birds' path.
-
-Usually they fly too high to mind it; but when there is a rain or fog
-they come much lower, and, sad to say, many of them fly against it and
-are killed.
-
-We often see strange birds in our city streets and parks, while they are
-passing through on their migrations, for they sometimes spend several
-days with us.
-
-A sparrow, who was hurt and unable to fly, was picked up one fall and
-kept in a house all winter. He was not caged, and he chose for his
-headquarters and sleeping-place a vase that stood on a shelf.
-
-He went with the family to the table, and made himself very much at home
-there. He picked out what he wanted to eat and drink, and scolded well
-if he did not have it.
-
-The thing he liked best was butter, and when he was ready to wipe his
-bill after eating, as birds do, he found the coat-sleeve of the master
-soft and nice for the purpose. This pleased the bird better than it did
-the owner of the sleeve, but he tried in vain to keep the saucy fellow
-off. If he forgot for an instant to watch the bird, he would dash up,
-wipe off the butter, and fly away out of the reach of everybody.
-
-In the spring the sparrow left the family, and lived out of doors. But,
-with the first cold weather of fall, he came back, went to his old vase,
-and settled himself for the winter again. This he did for several
-years.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-HIS WINTER HOME
-
-
-NEARLY every bird has two homes, one for winter and one for summer.
-
-We can see why birds leave us and go to a warmer and better place for
-the winter; but why they do not stay in that country where there is
-always plenty of food, but choose to come back in the spring to their
-old home, we do not know.
-
-It may be because they want more room to build nests, and bring up their
-little ones. Or it may be that they want to come back because they love
-their old home.
-
-Whatever may be the reason, it is well for us that they do so, for if we
-had no more birds in the summer than we have in the winter, we should
-suffer very much from insects. We could not raise fruit, or vegetables,
-or grain, for insects would eat it all. That is one reason we are so
-glad that birds come back to us in the spring.
-
-Though so many birds leave us in the fall, they do not all go. A few
-come to us who have nested farther north, and some who have been with us
-all summer stay over winter too. These last are called "permanent
-residents," that is, they stay all the year round.
-
-In the Middle States of the East--New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
-and Ohio--there are twenty or twenty-five who stay all the year. There
-are several hawks and owls and woodpeckers, the crow, bob-white, the
-blue jay, and the meadowlark, and, of the little ones, the goldfinch, in
-his sober winter coat, his cousin the purple finch, the song sparrow,
-the nuthatch, and the chickadee.
-
-Besides these "permanent residents," there are ten or twelve who come
-from the north. The funny little saw-whet owl is one, and the snowflake,
-who loves to frolic in the snow, is another.
-
-Many of our summer birds stay in the Southern States all winter. Those
-who can eat seeds and winter berries--for instance, robins and
-bluebirds, catbirds and sparrows--need not go very far south; and some
-of them even stay in the State of New York.
-
-Most of our birds who do not eat berries, but must have insects, go
-farther, some to Florida or the West Indies, others to Central America,
-and a few even into South America,--except the woodpecker, who gets his
-insects under the bark of trees.
-
-The summer birds of the Western States nearly all go to Mexico for the
-winter.
-
-The little birds who stay with us are only those who can eat seeds, as I
-said, or the eggs and insects to be found in the crevices of the bark on
-trees. These birds do a great deal of good, for each one destroys
-thousands of insects before they have come out of the egg. One small
-chickadee will eat several hundred insect eggs in a day.
-
-These little fellows can almost always find their food, for the snow
-seldom covers the trunks of the trees; but now and then in the winter we
-have an ice storm; then the trunks and branches are buried under ice, so
-that the birds suffer, and perhaps will starve to death.
-
-In such a time it will be kind of you who live in the country to put out
-food for them. You can give them any table scraps of meat or vegetables,
-or bread, chopped fine for their tiny mouths, with corn or grain for
-bigger birds.
-
-What they all like best to eat is suet,--which the butcher will give
-you,--chopped fine, or, better still, nailed or tied to a branch or a
-fence, so that they can pick off morsels for themselves. This will make
-them all very happy; but you must see that the English sparrow does not
-drive them away, or eat it all himself.
-
-Some persons who live in the country or small towns spread a table every
-day through the winter for the birds. Many come for food, and they have
-great pleasure in watching them and studying their ways.
-
-One lady I know who is an invalid, and her greatest happiness in the
-long cold months, when she cannot go out, is to set her breakfast-table,
-and watch the guests who come to it.
-
-She lives in the southern part of Ohio, and she has all winter cardinal
-grosbeaks, or redbirds as she calls them, blue jays, tufted titmice, and
-others. The cardinals are fine singers, and they sing to her every month
-in the year.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS
-
-
-MANY people think that as soon as the young birds of a nest are full
-grown, and know how to take care of themselves, the family separate, and
-have no more to do with each other. Some have even said that the old
-birds push the little ones out of the nest to get rid of them.
-
-All this is a great mistake, and any one who has watched them carefully
-will say so.
-
-In many cases, when the brood is grown and all have left the nest, the
-whole family keep together. One who has eyes sharp to see will find
-everywhere little groups of parents with their young. If the old birds
-rear more than one brood in a summer, the young ones of the first nest
-keep together.
-
-I have often seen little parties of young bluebirds or sparrows going
-about after food on the grass, or on the newly cut hay. Now and then one
-of the parents would come around as if to see that all was well, and
-then leave them alone again. When the second brood is ready to go out,
-the whole family often unite in a small flock. In some cases, where they
-could be watched, they have been known to stay so all winter. All
-through July and August, in the New England and Middle States, one may
-see these pretty little family groups.
-
-Some birds who live and nest by themselves, each pair in its own tree,
-or bush, or field, come together in larger parties after the young are
-grown, in a social way. A few do this only at night, in what are called
-roosts, which I spoke of in a former chapter.
-
-Other birds, when nestlings are out, unite in flocks, and stay so all
-the time, or through the winter. Our pretty little goldfinch does this.
-
-Most of the birds we see about our homes like to have a tree or bush to
-themselves for their nest. But there are many birds that live close
-together all the time. Some, you may say, in small villages,--swallows,
-for instance. We generally see several swallows flying about together.
-They make their nests near each other. The barn swallow chooses the
-beams inside the barn, and there are often three or four or more nests
-in the same barn.
-
-The eave swallows put their mud cottages in a row, under the eaves
-outside the barn. One would think they needed to have numbers on their
-doors, to know which was their own.
-
-There, too, are the common crow blackbirds. They come in the spring in
-crowds, and when it is time to make nests, they find some grove or clump
-of trees that suits them, and all of them build their nests close
-together. Often there are two or three on one tree, like a bird city.
-There they live and rear their little ones, and it is said they never
-quarrel.
-
-Then there are the birds who get their food from the sea, such as
-penguins. These birds live in big cities, of many thousand nests. They
-go to an island where no people live, and build on the ground, or on
-rocks, or anywhere.
-
-Sometimes they are so near together one can hardly walk without stepping
-on them. How each mother can tell her own, it is hard to see. They live
-very happily together, and if a mother is killed, so that her little
-ones are left orphans, one of the neighbors will adopt them all, and
-feed and bring them up with her own.
-
-Some of these birds do not even take the trouble to make a nest. They
-put the eggs anywhere on the sand or earth.
-
-Some one, Mr. Brehm, I think, tells a pretty story about a certain kind
-of duck who rears two broods every season. After the ducklings of the
-first brood have learned to take care of themselves, they go about
-together, getting their food and sailing on the water in a little party,
-while their parents are hatching the second brood. But when the younger
-ones are big enough, they are led to the water, and at once their elder
-brothers and sisters join them. They all swim around together, the
-youngest in the middle of the group, where they are protected and fed by
-the elder brood as well as by the parents, a lovely and united little
-family.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-HIS KINDNESS TO OTHERS
-
-
-BIRDS are helpful to each other when in trouble. If a robin is in
-distress, other robins will come to see what is the matter, and to help
-if they can. And not only robins, but catbirds, and orioles, and
-chickadees, and others, will come, too.
-
-Sometimes when a person tries to rob a nest, all the birds near will
-come in a crowd, to drive away the thief. They will cry and scream at
-him, and sometimes fly at his face, and try to peck his eyes.
-
-Birds are so little they cannot fight a man, but if they can peck at his
-face, they can hurt him, and if they really get at his eyes, they can
-put them out. We cannot blame the birds for trying to protect themselves
-and their young, and it is well for boys to be careful how they disturb
-a nest.
-
-One proof that birds really do help each other is the fact that when a
-man wants to know what birds live in a place, he can bring them all
-around him by making a sound like a young bird in distress. All who hear
-it will come to see what is the matter.
-
-Let me tell you a story of some young swallows. They were able to fly a
-little, and were sitting together on a roof, when a lady who was
-watching them noticed that one of them seemed to be weak, and not able
-to stand up.
-
-When the parents came with food, the others stood up and opened their
-mouths, and so were fed, but this little one hardly ever got a morsel.
-
-If birds had no love for each other, as many people think, these strong
-little ones would not have cared if their brother did starve; but what
-did the lady see? She says that two of the strong young swallows came
-close up to their weak brother, one on each side. They put their beaks
-under his breast and lifted him up on to his legs, and then crowded so
-close against him that their little bodies propped him up, and held him
-there; so that he had his chance of being fed as well as they.
-
-Many times birds have been seen who were blind or old, or who had a wing
-or a leg broken, or were in some way hurt so that they could not take
-care of themselves, and who were being waited upon by other birds, fed,
-and led to the water to drink and bathe.
-
-[Illustration: CHEWINK, OR TOWHEE]
-
-Birds have been found caught in the lining of a nest, so that they were
-held there and could not go for food. They had been there for weeks, and
-would have starved to death if they had not been fed. Yet they were so
-well taken care of by other birds that they were strong and able to fly.
-
-In one case, where the nest was in a tree trunk, the hole in the trunk
-had grown up, so that when big enough to fly, they could not get out,
-and they had been there for months. Yet when a man cut open the trunk
-and let them out, they were well and lively, proving that they had been
-fed by friends outside all that time.
-
-I could tell you many true stories of the kind care of birds for each
-other, and for baby birds who had lost their parents, or been stolen
-away from them.
-
-A gentleman in Massachusetts told me that when he was a boy he saw a
-small flock of chewinks who came about a house where food was put out
-for birds. They came every day, and he soon saw that one was bigger than
-the rest, and that he never tried to pick up anything for himself, but
-all the others fed him.
-
-One day he was cruel enough to throw a stone at the bird who was so well
-taken care of, and when he took up his victim, he found that the
-upper and lower parts of his bill were crossed, so that he could not
-pick up anything from the ground, where chewinks find their food. He had
-been born thus deformed, and if he had not been fed every day by his
-friends he must have starved to death. Yet so well had he been cared for
-that he was better grown than any of the others.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-HIS AFFECTIONS
-
-
-I AM sure I need not say that father and mother birds love their little
-ones.
-
-So much does the mother love her nestlings that she is often willing to
-die for them. Orioles and chickadees will let themselves be caught in
-the hand of one who has taken their young, rather than desert them.
-
-Some birds live in our chimneys, generally in a flue that is not in use,
-and are called chimney swifts. If a chimney takes fire the mother swift
-tries hard to get her little ones out, but if they cannot fly, she has
-been seen to fly into the fire herself, and die with them.
-
-Robins have been found frozen to death on their nest. They could easily
-have saved themselves, but they would not leave their young ones to
-perish. A ground bird has been known to sit on her nest during a
-freezing storm, till she died, rather than go and leave her little ones
-to suffer.
-
-Once when a young cedar-bird was caught and carried off, the father
-followed it for miles, crying and showing so much distress that the man
-who had stolen it was sorry for him, and let the little one go.
-
-Every one who has watched them knows that birds love their mates. A man
-once shot a sea bird, when her mate came about him, crying and showing
-his grief as well as if he could speak.
-
-I could easily fill a book with stories to prove that birds are loving
-to their mates and young, and all of them true.
-
-It does not seem strange that birds are fond of their own, but they love
-others also. And not only other birds, but even animals like cats, dogs,
-and horses sometimes.
-
-I once had an English goldfinch in the house. He was a little fellow,
-not so big as a canary, and he was very fond of another bird in the
-room. This was a scarlet tanager, who was much larger than himself.
-
-The small bird showed his love for his red friend, just as people show
-love, by staying close to him, singing to him, and driving away any bird
-who came too near.
-
-A lady once told me this story showing the love of a pigeon for a cat.
-The cat was fond of lying on the broad window sill. When the pigeon saw
-her there, he would fly down, and alight beside her. Then he would press
-up close to her, and rub against her fur, as if glad to see her, and the
-cat seemed to enjoy it as much as the bird.
-
-[Illustration: HOUSE WREN]
-
-Often a bird who is tamed loves his human friends. A man had a crow who
-was very fond of him. He had reared the bird from the nest and never
-shut him up, but let him fly about wherever he chose.
-
-One day he was out in a sudden rain, and his feathers got wet, so that
-he could not fly well. Then a boy caught him, and carried him seven
-miles away. He clipped one wing, so that the crow could not fly, and
-kept him shut in the house all winter. In the spring, the first time he
-could get out, the bird started for his old home.
-
-He could not fly, but he walked the seven miles, through mud and wet,
-and came home so tired that he was almost dead. When his master saw him
-coming he went to meet him, took him up and petted him, and talked to
-him.
-
-The poor fellow was so happy it seemed as if he could not live. But he
-was taken care of, and got well, and lived many years. But never after
-that would he leave the place, though when his new feathers came in he
-could fly as well as ever.
-
-Canary birds often love their mistresses. I have heard of one who was so
-grieved by a harsh word, that in a few minutes he fell off his perch
-dead.
-
-These true stories show us how tender and loving these little creatures
-are, and how careful we should be to treat them gently and kindly.
-
-An interesting and true story is told by a clergyman in Ohio. It is a
-habit of wrens to find a good nesting-place, and then look for a mate to
-occupy it. One spring a wren chose a nice bird-box on his place, and
-held it ready for the expected bride. But she did not come, and a pair
-of English sparrows took a fancy to the same house.
-
-Sparrows expect to get what they want, and are always ready to fight for
-it, so they gave battle to the wren. But wrens also will fight for their
-own, and this wren held his house against the enemy for two weeks. Still
-the mate did not appear, and finally the lonely bird lost heart, and let
-the sparrows set up house-keeping in his box, though he did not go away.
-
-When the young sparrows were hatched, and feeding began, the wren
-suddenly became friendly. He hunted up small green worms, probably such
-as are good for wrenlings, and offered them to the young sparrows.
-
-Nestlings are never known to refuse anything to eat, and wren food
-seemed to suit the sparrows, for they soon outgrew the nursery.
-
-All summer this queer thing went on. The sparrows reared three or four
-broods, and the wren did his full share of the work,--and not only of
-feeding the young, but of repairing and rebuilding the nest for each
-fresh brood.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-HIS INTELLIGENCE
-
-
-BEFORE people knew very much about the ways of birds, it was thought
-that they did not have to be taught anything, but that they knew
-everything they needed to know, as soon as they were born. That is, they
-were said to act from instinct alone, and not at all from reason, as we
-do.
-
-Another notion that people had was that birds of a kind were just alike;
-that they looked exactly like each other, all acted in the same way, and
-all sang the same song.
-
-But since we have begun to study birds more closely, we find these
-things are not true. We find that birds learn things by being taught, as
-we do. Also, they find out how to do things themselves, and they are not
-all alike, as so many machines.
-
-More than this, we see that they do not look nor act exactly like each
-other. For when we know one robin or one oriole well, we can tell him
-from any other robin or oriole. And, as I said before, no two of a kind
-sing precisely the same song.
-
-A bird shows his intelligence in many ways. One is by the way he acts
-when he cannot do as he is used to doing. A robin I know of wished to
-build a nest, but could not find mud to put into it, for it was a very
-dry time, and there were no streams near. Now a robin's nest must have
-mud, and the bird seemed puzzled for a while. But at last she thought of
-a way to get it.
-
-She went to a bathing-dish that the people of the house kept filled with
-water for the birds, jumped into it, and got her legs very wet. Then she
-flew to the road, and tramped around in the dust and dirt.
-
-In a short time her legs had a good coating of mud, which she carefully
-picked off with her bill, and took to the nest she was building.
-
-This she did a great many times, and the lady who told me of it watched
-her till she had as much mud as she needed.
-
-A bird often shows sense by the way she repairs a nest that has been
-thrown out of place. Sometimes she will add a new stay, tying the nest
-to a stronger limb. One sparrow, whose nest broke loose, put so many
-stays to the branch above that they made a little roof like a tent over
-it.
-
-Another way a bird shows reason is in seeing the advantage of a new
-place. A pair of swallows lived far out in the West, hundreds of miles
-from any house. They had no doubt always nested in a cave, or a hole in
-a tree. But one day they found a house put up. It was a mere shed, to be
-used as a blacksmith shop, by a party of men who were looking over the
-country.
-
-At once the birds saw how nice it would be to have a roof over their
-heads. And although there was a big fire, and the noise of men at work,
-they built the nest over the anvil, and reared the family in safety.
-
-Woodpeckers have shown that they can learn. Some of them have found an
-easier way to get food than to dig through the bark of trees for it.
-
-The flicker, or golden-winged woodpecker, has learned that ants and
-other insects are good to eat, and now he does not think of digging into
-bark any more.
-
-The red-headed woodpecker has learned to catch flies like a common
-flycatcher. The yellow-bellied, or sapsucker, cuts holes in the trees,
-and eats the insects that come to feed on the sweet sap that drips from
-them.
-
-[Illustration: FLICKER]
-
-Woodpeckers have also learned to cut a hole through a board and nest
-inside a building, instead of drilling a deep hole in the trunk of a
-tree for a nest.
-
-Birds show intelligence when they draw us away from their young ones, by
-acting as if they were hurt and not able to fly. I have already spoken
-about that.
-
-Sometimes when a bird is caught he will lie quiet and pretend to be
-dead. But all the time he is looking out for a chance to fly away.
-
-A man who watched birds very closely once saw an interesting instance of
-their intelligence. They were two of the birds who get their food on the
-seashore by turning over stones and eating the creatures hidden under
-them. They had found a big dead fish thrown up on the beach and half
-buried in sand. Under such a fish they were sure they should find food,
-so they went to work to turn it over. The fish was three and a half feet
-long, and the birds were about as big as our sandpipers. So it was a
-hard thing to do.
-
-First they pushed against it with their beaks and breast, but it did not
-move. Then they went around the other side and scratched away a good
-deal of sand from under the fish, and went back and tried again to turn
-it over. Still it was too heavy to stir.
-
-Again they ran around the other side, scraped away more sand, and tried
-it once more. They kept up this work for half an hour, but did not
-succeed in stirring the great fish.
-
-At this time the man, who had hidden himself to watch them, saw another
-bird coming. The two little workers greeted him with joyful cries, to
-which he replied in the same tones. Then all three set to work on the
-heavy fish. They dug more sand out from the lower side, and then pushed
-against the upper side with all their strength. They lifted it a few
-inches, but it fell back.
-
-At last, after resting a few minutes, without moving from their places,
-they worked it in this way. They rested their breasts on the sand, put
-their beaks under, and lifted. When the fish was raised several inches,
-they held it with their beaks and pushed their breasts against it, when
-over it went, down the little pitch they had made.
-
-They could not stop, and they went with it, but at once came back and
-found enough to pay them for their hard work.
-
-One who really watches birds to see what they are doing will see many
-actions that show intelligence and reason.
-
-
-
-
-HOW HE IS MADE
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-HIS BODY
-
-
-DID you ever think how well the bird is made to suit his life? Look at
-him.
-
-To fit him to move through the air in flying, his shape is the same that
-men make their boats to move through water. It is sharp in front to cut
-his way as he goes through, for even the air needs to be cut.
-
-It is narrower toward the back, and as he flies, the feet are drawn up
-or trail behind, and even the feathers lie backward. All this is so he
-can go swiftly through the air, and nothing, not even a feather, will
-hold him back.
-
-To keep his body upright, so that he will not be top-heavy and tip over
-as he flies, his weight is mostly below the wings.
-
-If we should try to go through the air as fast as a bird goes, we should
-find it very hard to breathe. But the bird is made for it. When you come
-to study his anatomy, you will see what a wonderful little creature he
-is.
-
-He can sing while he is working very hard to fly upward. If you will try
-to sing while running up a hill, you will see how hard it is to do that.
-
-A bird's head is joined to his neck at one place, something like a
-hinge. Other animals, like dogs and cats, have two hinges, or places of
-joining. That is why a bird is able to turn his head around so far that
-he can look down his own back. No other creature can do so.
-
-Because of this, he is able to dress every feather on his body, and to
-sleep with his head laid back on his shoulder.
-
-Nearly all birds have some of their bones hollow, and air-sacs, or
-pockets, under the skin. These sacs they can fill with air and make
-themselves light, so that those who live in the water cannot sink, but
-float like a cork.
-
-Men who study the way birds are made do not yet know all the uses of the
-hollow bones and air-sacs. That is one of the things left for you young
-folk to find out.
-
-Birds who get their food in marshes, or the edge of the water, have long
-legs for wading. They have also long necks, so they can pick up food
-from the ground.
-
-Birds who swim have webs between the toes, that turn their feet into
-paddles.
-
-Birds have very large gullets. In many cases the gullet leads into a
-place called the crop, where food is kept before it goes into the
-stomach. Sometimes the food is made soft in the crop, and then fed to
-the young ones, as I told you.
-
-Birds have no teeth, yet they eat hard seeds, like acorns and grains of
-corn. To break these up, and get them ready for the stomach, they have a
-gizzard, which is a sort of grinding-mill. And to help in the work of
-grinding they swallow small stones.
-
-One of the wonderful things about birds is the height at which they can
-live, and not only live, but fly. A man cannot go higher than twenty-two
-or twenty-three thousand feet, while moving about or exercising, because
-the air is so rare he cannot breathe. The highest a man was ever known
-to go and live, it is said, was less than thirty thousand feet, and that
-was in a balloon, where he did not move.
-
-But birds go a good deal higher than this, and can fly--which is violent
-exercise--at that height. It is thought by some that the thinness of the
-air may be the cause of the great speed with which birds fly in that
-region. But there is still much to be found out about this.
-
-Besides the marvels of flight, birds have other powers almost as
-strange. Many of them can fly under water with perfect ease, and, more
-than that, they can, when they wish, sink slowly till nothing is left
-above water but their beaks, to breathe. And they can stay so as long as
-they choose, keeping still in one spot, without moving.
-
-A cormorant in a zoological garden, who wanted to catch some of the
-swallows skimming over the pond, sank his body till only his head was
-out, and held himself there perfectly still.
-
-Birds who are hunted, as geese, have been known to save their lives in
-that way, by sinking their body under water, leaving in sight only the
-tip of the bill, which is so small it is not readily seen.
-
-To do such things, birds must be able to make their bodies heavy when
-they choose, as well as light, which we know they are able to do by
-filling their air-sacs with air.
-
-There are many things still to be found out about the powers of birds.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-HIS BEAK AND TONGUE
-
-
-HOW does a bird get along without a hand? He has to prepare food; to
-keep his feathers in order; to build the nest; to feed and take care of
-the young; and sometimes to fight other birds. How can all this be done
-without a hand?
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 1.
-
-Bill of Oriole.]
-
-The beak is the only thing most birds have in place of a hand, and it is
-wonderful to see how many things they can do with it.
-
-Orioles use it as a needle, in making the nest. With it they weave
-strips of soft bark or strings, back and forth, in and out, to make the
-firm pocket they hang on the elm-tree (see Fig. 1).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 2.
-
-Bill of Woodpecker.]
-
-A woodpecker's beak is a chisel or pick, to cut a deep hole in a tree
-trunk for a nest (Fig. 2). With a nuthatch it is a hammer, to crack the
-nut he has wedged into a crevice in the bark so tightly it cannot slip.
-
-[Illustration: WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH]
-
-Some birds use the beak to dig in the ground, as the bank swallows,
-while the barn swallows make it a trowel, to carry and plaster mud (Fig.
-3). All of them use it as a hand to feed themselves, and a brush and
-comb to dress their feathers.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 3. Bill of Swallow.]
-
-Birds need to use the beak a good deal, because in most cases it grows
-like our finger-nails. If they did not keep it worn off, it would grow
-so long as to trouble them. Sometimes when a bird lives in a cage and
-does not use his bill, it grows so long that he can hardly pick up his
-food.
-
-The woodcock's long beak is sensitive, so that he can feel the worms,
-deep in the mud where they live. Many waders and swimmers have beaks
-soft like leather.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 4. Bill of Hawk.]
-
-You can tell by the shape of the beak how a bird lives, and what he
-eats. The strong, hooked beak of a hawk shows that he catches live
-animals to eat (Fig. 4). The long, narrow, sharp bill of a heron shows
-that he spears his prey, often under water.
-
-The sharp-pointed bill of a warbler is to pick tiny insects and eggs out
-of blossoms, and from under leaves. The sharp-edged bill of a sparrow
-(Fig. 5) is to break open the hard shells of seeds.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 5. Bill of Sparrow.]
-
-The curious beak of a crossbill (Fig. 6) is to pick seeds out of pine
-cones.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 6. Bill of Crossbill.]
-
-A duck's wide beak, with a strainer at the edge, is to let water out
-while keeping food in. A spoon-shaped bill is to scoop up food, and a
-thin, flat one is to poke into narrow cracks.
-
-Both parts of the beak, which take the place of our jaws, are called
-mandibles, upper and lower. Both of them can be moved, while we can move
-only our lower jaw.
-
-Birds' tongues are as curious as their beaks. To all birds they take the
-place of a finger, as the beak takes the place of a hand, and they
-differ as much as the beaks from each other.
-
-Insect eggs are very small, and often packed snugly into cracks and
-corners, and the birds who eat them have a brush on the tip of the
-tongue, which brushes an egg out of its hiding-place very easily.
-
-The nuthatch picks his small grubs out of crevices in bark with the
-four-tined fork at the end of his tongue.
-
-A hummingbird's tongue can be used as a tube, to draw up the honey of
-flowers, or perhaps as a pair of tweezers, to pick out the tiny spiders
-that live there.
-
-A woodpecker has barbs on his tongue, to spear insects hidden under the
-bark, as shown by Mr. Lucas (Fig. 7). It is said to be sticky also, to
-hold small ones, like ants.
-
-The tongues of birds are of many shapes, but each one is fitted to its
-owner's way of getting a living.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 7. Tip of Tongue of Downy Woodpecker.]
-
-Because the tongue is often horny, and they eat strange things, it is
-sometimes thought that birds have little sense of taste. But we cannot
-be sure of this, and we know they all have notions about their food.
-
-Dr. Ward tells a story of some geese, which shows that they do not lack
-that sense. While sailing upon a river he noticed on the bank some
-geese, feeding on the rinds of watermelon, which they picked out of the
-garbage dumped there.
-
-The rind, when taken out of the mass, was none too clean, being covered
-with mud and other dirt. When a goose found a piece to suit him, he took
-it up, carried it to the edge, and dropped it into the shallow water.
-Then he stood and watched it till the running stream washed it clean,
-when he stepped into the water and quickly ate off the part he wanted.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-HIS EYES AND EARS
-
-
-BIRDS' eyes are very different from ours. To begin with, they are round.
-Then they are placed one on each side of the head, so that they can look
-two ways at once. Owls are the only birds who have eyes turned forward
-like ours.
-
-Birds' eyes also are of many colors. Besides our common black, brown,
-blue, and gray, birds have light and dark green, bright red, pale and
-deep yellow and orange, even white.
-
-They have, like us, two eyelids. But while we use the upper one to close
-our eyes, most birds use the lower one. They have also a third eyelid,
-inside the others, a thin, white sort of skin, that moves across the eye
-from side to side, and is called the "nictitating membrane."
-
-There are other ways in which birds' eyes differ from ours. The men who
-try to know exactly how birds are made have found out that birds' eyes
-make everything look much larger than it is, in other words, they are
-like magnifying glasses, or microscopes, so that a tiny insect egg, that
-we can hardly see, looks very big to a warbler.
-
-Stranger still, when a bird is far off, his eyes are like telescopes.
-That is, when a hawk is soaring about far above the earth, he can see a
-mouse on the ground as well as if he had a telescope to look through.
-And the gulls who sail about over the shore, and follow steamers on sea
-voyages, can see small fish and tiny bits of bread thrown out by the
-passengers, even when they are lost to us in the foam made by the
-vessel.
-
-Mr. Frank Bolles had a pet barred owl, and used to take him out with
-him. He says that the bird's sight was wonderful, better than his own
-aided by a strong glass. Many times the bird would see and watch a hawk
-so far off that Mr. Bolles with his glass could not see him until he
-came nearer, and then he looked no bigger than a dot against the sky.
-
-There is a story told of some small birds migrating over the island of
-Heligoland, suddenly coming down in a flock on to a man's garden, and
-beginning at once to work among the leaves as if they were feeding.
-
-The owner of the garden knew they did not eat leaves, so he shot a few
-and found them stuffed with small caterpillars. Then he looked at the
-plants and found many more caterpillars, each in the curled-up end of a
-leaf. The insects could not be seen, yet the birds, while flying over,
-no doubt saw the curled leaves and knew they were there.
-
-Such eyes must be of great use in helping birds to find their food, and
-to avoid their enemies. But think what giants we must look to them! It
-is no wonder they are afraid of us.
-
-Perhaps even more useful to a bird than his eyes are his ears, though
-they are so nicely covered up by the feathers that we cannot see them.
-The tufts of feathers that stand up on some owls' heads, and are called
-ears, are not ears at all, but merely decorations, like the crests of
-some birds and the long tail feathers of others.
-
-But because they cannot be seen, we must not think birds have no ears;
-they have very good ones indeed. They can hear much better than we can.
-
-Every one has seen a robin run over the grass and turn his head one side
-to listen. It is supposed that he hears the earthworm move under the
-sod, and if he is watched, he will often be seen to pull the worm from
-that very spot.
-
-When a woodpecker taps on a tree trunk and turns his head to listen, it
-is thought that he hears the grub stir under the bark, for when he
-begins to cut the bark away, he is pretty sure to find and draw it out.
-
-Birds that are much hunted by men, like ducks and geese, get to be very
-knowing, and show how wonderful is their hearing. They can tell the
-difference between a noise made by an animal and that made by a man. A
-deer or any animal may crash through the bushes, and they pay no
-attention to it, but if a man makes the least sound they are off in an
-instant.
-
-A bird's ears are behind the eyes, and a little below them. They are
-covered by delicate feathers that hide them from sight. When the bird
-raises these feathers--perhaps to hear better--they look like tiny ear
-muffs.
-
-Owls have little flaps of skin with which they can shut up their ears
-when they wish to be quiet. This must be very useful to birds who prefer
-to sleep during the day, when nearly everybody else is awake and making
-a noise. Many of us who live in cities would like to be able to close
-our ears sometimes.
-
-Mr. Bolles tells a story about the sharp hearing of a heron. The bird
-was on a tree dressing his plumage, and he was hidden in some bushes and
-could not be seen.
-
-Mr. Bolles made all sorts of noises to start up the heron and make him
-fly. First he imitated animal sounds. He quacked, and barked, and mewed,
-and brayed, and the bird looked interested, but not at all alarmed. Then
-he whistled and sang, and at last talked plainly, but the bird only
-looked over his way, as if to see what new sort of beast was hidden
-there.
-
-No noise that he could make startled the heron in the least, until a
-twig snapped under his foot, when the bird was off like a shot. That
-sound he well knew was made by his most feared enemy, man.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-HIS FEET AND LEGS
-
-
-A BIRD always stands on his toes, not on his whole foot, as we do. The
-long slim part that we call the leg is really the foot, and the joint we
-see nearly up to the bird's body is the bird's heel. But in this book we
-will speak of it in the common way, calling the toes the foot, and the
-part up to the joint the leg.
-
-People all over the world have the same kind of feet and the same number
-of toes; but with birds it is not so. Most of them have four toes (Fig.
-8), but some have only three, and a few have no more than two.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 8.
-
-Foot of Blackbird.]
-
-In the use of the feet there is still more variety. There are, as Dr.
-Coues divides them, three kinds of feet among birds:--
-
-[Illustration: LESSER YELLOWLEGS]
-
-First, a foot that can be used like a hand to clasp a perch, a "perching
-foot."
-
-Second, one that is good to use as a foot, but not at all like a hand,
-called a "scratching foot."
-
-Third, one that is like neither hand nor foot, but a paddle, called a
-"swimming foot."
-
-The birds who have the first kind, the "perching foot," have usually
-three toes turned forward and one turned back. They can grasp a branch
-or a twig as tightly as if with a hand, as all our common little birds
-do. And the large birds of prey, such as hawks and owls (Fig. 9), hold
-in them live mice and squirrels and the other little animals they eat.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 9. Foot of Hawk.]
-
-Some birds with perching feet have the toes placed another way.
-Woodpeckers have two turned forward and two turned back, so that they
-can hold better to a tree trunk (Fig. 10).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 10. Foot of Woodpecker.]
-
-A strange thing about the perching toes is the way they are made to hold
-on, so that the birds can sleep on a perch, and not fall. Inside the
-toes are tendons, something like cords, which act like elastic
-rubber. When a bird bends his leg, the toes are drawn up and held so.
-When he is sitting on a perch, he could not fall off if he wanted to.
-
-Birds who have the "scratching foot," the second kind, mostly go about
-on the ground, or wade in the water. They do not usually sleep on
-perches, but sleep standing, or crouch on the ground. In the arctic
-regions, where there is a great deal of snow, some birds with scratching
-feet, who have to go about in it, have in winter what has been called
-"snowshoes," because it enables them to walk on the snow with ease. It
-is a web-like growth on the side of each toe, which serves the same
-purpose with birds that snowshoes do with men, keeps them from sinking
-into the snow.
-
-Birds who have the "swimming foot," the third kind, have the toes made
-into a paddle by webs stretched between them. They are the water
-birds,--ducks, geese, gulls, and others.
-
-The toes of all birds have long, sharp claws, not at all like our
-toe-nails. In the whip-poor-will and the nighthawk, one edge of the
-middle claw has teeth like a comb.
-
-The long slim part above the toes, what we call the leg, is named in the
-books the "tarsus." The tarsus is generally bare, with a leathery skin;
-but in some hawks and owls it is covered with feathers. Birds who live
-away up in the cold have feathers down on to the toes.
-
-On looking carefully at one of these bare legs, it will be seen that it
-is not smooth like a lead pencil. It is marked in a sort of pattern.
-Different species of birds show different patterns. Some look like the
-shingles on a roof; others like little squares or plates; and some are
-finer, like scales on a tiny fish.
-
-These marks help in arranging birds in the books. That is, all who have
-the same pattern are said to be related.
-
-The legs of birds are not all of the same length for their size. Some
-who never go about on the ground, like hummingbirds, swallows, and
-swifts, have very short legs. Birds who walk and hop on the ground have
-them longer, and birds who wade in the water have the longest of all.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-HIS WINGS AND TAIL
-
-
-A BIRD'S wing does not look much like our arm and hand, yet the bones
-show that they are the same. The bird has a shoulder, elbow, and wrist,
-as we have. He even has fingers, though they are so covered up by
-feathers that one would never know it. He has not so many fingers as we
-have, and they are not movable like ours.
-
-A bird's wing is a wonderful flying-machine, which men have been trying
-to imitate these many years. It is made of long stiff feathers, which
-fold down smoothly over one another at his side when he is resting, but
-can spread in an instant into a broad fan, to beat the air and carry him
-away.
-
-One would not think that feathers could have so much power; but when the
-wing is spread, the barbs of the feathers hook together with tiny hooks,
-so small a microscope is needed to see them; and that, together with the
-edges lapping over each other, makes them almost like one solid
-surface.
-
-Wings are not alike in shape. The wing of a swallow is long and narrow,
-while that of a hen or grouse is short and round. We can tell by the
-shape of a wing how a bird flies.
-
-A long, narrow, pointed wing shows that the bird has an easy, skimming
-flight,--either he flies great distances, or spends hours at a time on
-wing (Fig. 11).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 11.
-
-Wing of Swift.]
-
-The short round wing (Fig. 12) shows that a bird has a strong flight for
-short distances. These wings are found mostly on rather heavy birds,
-like grouse.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 12.
-
-Wing of Sparrow.]
-
-The longest wings are seen on water birds, such as the petrel and the
-frigate-bird. The shortest, also, are found among water birds, those who
-swim more than they fly, as the auks.
-
-All the feathers of the wing are named, and it will be well to remember
-that the long stiff quills are called _remiges_ or "rowers." These are
-firmly rooted in the flesh, and are the hardest to pull out. They are
-the most important to the safety of the bird.
-
-Birds have also another use for their wings. They are a strong weapon to
-defend themselves, or to fight others. A large bird can give a severe
-blow with his wing, and when pigeons fight, it is said they hold up one
-wing to protect themselves while they strike at the enemy with the
-other.
-
-Sometimes wings serve as musical instruments. Woodcocks make whistling
-sounds with their wings as they fly, and mourning doves softly murmuring
-ones. Ruffed grouse produce with theirs a rolling drum-like effect, and
-others rattle theirs like castanets.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 13.
-
-Tail of Ruffed Grouse.]
-
-If wings are not used, they slowly get to be smaller and weaker, each
-generation having them more and more useless, till after a while they
-are of no use whatever, and the birds cannot fly at all. This has
-happened, it is supposed, to the ostrich family and to some birds living
-in the sea.
-
-[Illustration: BROWN THRASHER]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 14.
-
-Tail of Vireo.]
-
-The tail of a bird is formed of an equal number of feathers in pairs,
-most often twelve. When spread they are the shape of a fan (Fig. 13),
-and when closed they lie over each other with the middle pair on top.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 15.
-
-Tail of Swallow-tailed Kite.]
-
-The tail feathers are not always of the same length, and that makes a
-difference in the shape of the end. Sometimes they are even (like Fig.
-14), when the tail is said to be "square." Sometimes the middle feathers
-are a little longer than the outside ones, and then it is "rounded"
-or "pointed." If the outside feathers are longest, the tail is "forked"
-(Fig. 15).
-
-The feathers of the tail are called _rectrices_, or "rudders," because
-they are supposed to be used to steer, or direct the bird's course in
-flying. But the tail is used also as a brake to check the speed in
-alighting.
-
-The tail is used more than any other organ to express the emotions. Some
-birds, like the catbird and thrasher, keep it moving nearly all the
-time, jerking it this way and that, and tossing it upward.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 16.
-
-Tail of Sapsucker.]
-
-In woodpeckers and swifts the tail feathers are not soft at the end like
-others, but the stems or shafts project beyond the feathery part, and
-are stiff like the tail of a sapsucker (Fig. 16) or sharp like this of
-the chimney swift (Fig. 17). These birds use the tail as a prop to hold
-them against the tree trunk or chimney wall, and to help them in
-climbing.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 17.
-
-Swift Tail.]
-
-Tail feathers are not so strongly rooted as wing feathers, and are
-easily pulled out. Sometimes, when a man or boy tries to catch a bird by
-the tail, the bird will escape, leaving the tail in his hand.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-HIS DRESS
-
-
-A BIRD'S whole dress is made of feathers, but the feathers are not all
-alike. There are, indeed, several kinds of feathers, and four of them
-are found on every bird. There are flight feathers, clothing feathers,
-downy feathers, thread feathers, and powder-down feathers.
-
-Feathers of all kinds are made in the same way. All have, first, a
-quill, the horny part next to the body; second, a shaft, the white part
-on which the barbs grow; third, the barbs, which grow out on each side
-of the shaft, and together are called the vane; fourth, the barbules, or
-little barbs, growing out of the barbs; and last, the barbicels, which
-grow on the barbules, and on the wings have the tiny hooks which hold
-them together.
-
-But though feathers are made on the same pattern, they look very
-different. The wing and tail feathers are stiff and strong, and are
-called flight feathers, but those on the breast and body are called
-soft, and cling closely to keep the bird warm and dry. These are called
-the clothing feathers, because they clothe the bird.
-
-Down feathers, which are almost always hidden under the clothing
-feathers, are, like their name, downy, and answer to our under-clothes.
-
-Thread feathers grow among the clothing feathers, and are almost like
-hairs. It is these that the cook singes off the fowls.
-
-Kingfishers who dive, and ducks who spend much time on the water, have
-very thick down under the feathers--like suits of very warm
-under-clothes--which keeps the water away from their bodies. Thus they
-can dive, or sit on the water hours at a time, and not feel wet at all.
-
-Powder-down feathers grow on some herons and cockatoos. They are called
-by that name because the tip ends are continually breaking off like
-white dust. Nobody knows their use.
-
-Different from all these are the feathers called plumes, like the long,
-soft ostrich plumes we all know; the dainty little ones that stand
-straight up, and look as if the wind would blow them away; the long,
-showy feathers that the peacock spreads with so much pride, or even the
-pretty, drooping ones in the cock's tail.
-
-These feathers are of no use for flight or for warmth, they rather
-hinder than help. They are for ornament, and there are many kinds among
-birds, all exquisitely beautiful. Nature has given to birds a more
-wonderful dress than to any other living creature.
-
-It is with his feathers that a bird expresses his feelings. In anger he
-fluffs them out till he looks twice as big as usual; we have all seen a
-hen bristle up when a dog comes near her brood.
-
-Nervousness or excitement is shown by jerking the wings and tail, and if
-a bird wishes to escape notice, he can make his plumage a perfect
-disguise. Mr. Bolles's pet owl would stretch himself up long and slim,
-with feathers hugging his body, when he looked so much like a broken
-branch of a tree that Mr. Bolles could hardly see him. And another owl
-that I heard of, when he was on the ground, would flatten himself and
-spread his plumage around, so that the eye could scarcely separate him
-from the dead leaves about him.
-
-No one takes better care of his dress than a bird, and that is why it
-looks well for a year. Every day, with most birds, it is washed and
-carefully dried, each feather being passed through the bill, and the
-whole thoroughly shaken out. At night one may often see robins and
-catbirds before going to bed, dressing their plumage and shaking off the
-day's dust.
-
-Besides washing and drying the feathers, birds need oil to keep them in
-best condition. For this purpose they have a little "oil jug," a small
-gland over the tail, out of which, with the bill, they can squeeze a
-drop of oil. We often see ducks and geese oiling their feathers before a
-rain.
-
-Water birds, who need a great deal of oil to keep out the wet, have the
-oil jug very large.
-
-Birds seem to know perfectly well the beauty of their plumage. Not only
-do they try to show it off, as the peacock when he spreads his tail, but
-they seem to feel shame when their feathers are injured or soiled. One
-white feather coming in where it does not belong will make a bird very
-unhappy. He will work and tug at it to pull it out, and often make
-himself actually ill over the trouble. I had a captive bird who died, I
-think, from worry and work over a wing feather which persisted in coming
-in white, and which he insisted on pulling out every time.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-DIFFERENT COLORED SUITS
-
-
-A BIRD does not always wear the same colored dress, as I said in the
-chapter on moulting. A goldfinch, who through the summer wears a gay
-yellow coat, comes out in the fall in plain olive and black; and the
-scarlet tanager, who flourishes in the most brilliant red, changes to a
-quiet green in winter. Besides these, some birds wear at one season a
-spotted coat, and come out afterwards in one of plain colors.
-
-Most of them change by moulting, as I explained, the old feathers
-dropping out and new ones of another color coming in; or, to speak
-exactly, the new ones growing out and pushing the old ones off on their
-tips. But some change color without moulting. All birds moult completely
-in the autumn, many moult partially in the spring, and some, as I said,
-change without moulting.
-
-This last change of color is made partly by fading, and partly by
-breaking off the tips of the feathers, or what is called "abrasion."
-This is a curious process. I told you something about it in chapter vii.
-Certain feathers have edges different in color from the rest; as, for
-example, a black feather with tips of yellow. While the feathers are new
-and perfect, as they lie over each other like shingles on a roof, only
-the edges show, and these being yellow, the bird appears to be dressed
-in yellow. But the yellow tips are not so strong as the rest, and they
-break or wear off, or are pulled off in the spring. What is strange,
-they break exactly where the black begins. So as soon as the yellow is
-off, the black shows, and behold, the yellow bird suddenly becomes a
-black bird.
-
-That is the way some birds manage to put on their spring dress in the
-fall. The solid color is the color of the spring, but it is hidden or
-veiled by tips of another color for winter.
-
-The meadowlark changes in this way. In the winter his coat is brownish,
-or buff. In the spring these tips are worn or broken off, and he comes
-out in yellow and black.
-
-Another change, even more curious, is made by some birds, who all winter
-wear white spots, or light scolloped edges to their feathers, and in
-spring the spots are gone.
-
-In these, the white or light parts only break off, as sharply as if cut
-with scissors. They leave the edges of the feathers notched in queer
-ways, but as they lie over each other that does not show.
-
-[Illustration: BLACK AND WHITE WARBLERS (MALE AND FEMALE)]
-
-Birds in this way can change color without changing their feathers.
-While moulting but once a year, they can show two suits, and by
-partially moulting twice, can show three suits.
-
-Another thing about the color of feathers is interesting. Some colors,
-such as black, and red, and brown, are caused by coloring matter in the
-feather. But other colors are only an effect of the way the feather is
-made, whether it has ridges on it, or certain minute specks under the
-surface, which seem to act as prisms (says Dr. Newton), and reflect the
-light in different colors.
-
-For instance, green is always due to some shade of yellow coloring
-matter under a surface full of lengthwise ridges, and other colors are
-made in similar ways.
-
-These curious facts have been found out by that tell-tale little
-instrument the microscope, and no doubt it will reveal many more secrets
-in time.
-
-Color is useful to birds, as well as beautiful. Its great use is to
-conceal them from their enemies, and they show that they know this by
-their conduct.
-
-When a bird is of the color of dead leaves, or the sand, he has only
-to flatten himself and keep still, and he is hidden. Such a bird on the
-nest will often let one come close, and even stroke her, while relying
-on her color to be unseen. A sitting ruffed grouse will do so. But if
-snow falls, the same bird is very wild, for she knows she can be seen in
-the snow.
-
-I have seen a striped bird,--black and white warbler,--when frightened,
-flatten himself on a branch, where he looked so much like the bark that
-he could not be seen.
-
-Ground birds are mostly in mottled colors of the ground. The
-whip-poor-will, whose habit it is to rest on a log all day, wears colors
-that hide him as well as if he were under the log.
-
-The striking colors on a bird are often bidden when he is at rest, but
-show plainly when he flies. When a flicker stands quietly on a fence he
-is all in rather dull colors, but when he flies he shows a large
-snow-white spot on his back, so that as far as one can see him he may be
-known.
-
-A meadowlark on the ground looks not unlike a flicker, but when he flies
-he shows that the outside feathers of his tail are white. This is as
-striking a mark as the white spot on the flicker.
-
-Many birds have such markings, and it is thought by men who study birds
-and look for a use in everything, that such marks serve the purpose of
-"danger signals" or "recognition marks." That by these birds can know
-each other in the dusk, or that the flash of color will catch the eye,
-when the bird does not wish to give a call, but to slip away quietly to
-avoid danger, and at the same time to give notice to other birds to do
-the same.
-
-
-
-
-HIS RELATIONS WITH US
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-HOW HE WORKS FOR US
-
-
-MANY times in this book I have spoken of the great value of the services
-of birds, in helping us destroy insects and weeds that injure our crops.
-But there is more to be said about it.
-
-From morning till night, almost the whole of his life, nearly every bird
-is working for us. He does not know he is working for us, of course. He
-is simply hunting for the food he likes, and what is good for young
-birds to eat.
-
-But what he chooses to eat himself, and to feed the young, consists
-mostly of creatures that destroy our fruit and vegetables, caterpillars
-that eat the leaves off our trees, worms that get into our apples and
-berries, beetles that spoil our roses and our potatoes, mice that eat
-our crops, and all the worms and grubs that gardeners and farmers are
-all the time fighting.
-
-As I have already said, some of the birds like cherries and green peas,
-and other things we prefer to keep for ourselves. But we should never
-forget that they have earned, by their work among the worms, all they
-can take.
-
-[Illustration: CEDAR-BIRD]
-
-I say this, not merely because I love the birds, and want to have them
-live and be happy, but because it is true. It has been proved true by
-scientific men in the service of the United States government.
-
-These men have had thousands of birds killed to see what they were
-eating, and have found out that nearly all the birds they have
-examined--blackbirds, cedar-birds, blue jays, hawks, owls, even
-crows--do us more good by the injurious creatures they destroy, than
-harm by the fruits and vegetables they eat. To this there is, among the
-small birds, but one exception, the English sparrow, and, of the large
-ones, only the two hawks and one owl, mentioned on page 53.
-
-Chickadees like to eat the eggs of cankerworms; and for a single meal,
-one of these tiny birds will eat two hundred and fifty eggs, and he will
-take several meals a day. Now cankerworms destroy our apples. When they
-get into an orchard in force, it looks, as Miss Merriam says, as if it
-had been burned over.
-
-Robins, catbirds, and shrikes, and several others, like to eat cutworms,
-which destroy grass and other plants. As many as three hundred of them
-have been found in the stomach of one robin, of course for one meal.
-Ants are very troublesome in many ways, and three thousand of them have
-been taken from the stomach of one flicker.
-
-Rats and mice, ground squirrels and gophers, make great havoc in our
-crops, and farmers spend much time and labor trying to get rid of them;
-but these creatures are the favorite food of most hawks and owls.
-
-If the farmer would stop shooting the birds, and protect them instead,
-they would do this work for him, and much better than he can. But
-because (as I said in a former chapter) one or two hawks and owls have a
-taste for chickens, he generally kills every hawk and owl he sees, and
-for this folly has to spend half his time trying to kill the little
-animals they would gladly have eaten.
-
-A great deal of refuse, dead sea creatures, and other matter, is thrown
-up on the seashore, or floats on the water. On this feed the water
-birds,--herons, gulls, terns, and others. If this were not disposed of,
-it would make us sick. Indeed, on the shores where so many herons have
-been killed, to get their plumes for ladies' hats, the result has been
-sickness and death among the people, as Dr. Gaumer, of Yucatan, told Mr.
-Chapman.
-
-Besides the work they do for us in destroying animal life, their
-seed-eating is almost as useful. As I said, they eat the seeds of weeds
-that farmers and gardeners are all the time laboring to keep down, so
-that useful plants may have a chance to grow.
-
-The whole family of finches, sparrows, buntings, grosbeaks, and all
-birds with the high, thick bill, though they eat largely of insects
-through the summer, and feed their nestlings on them, when insects get
-scarce and weed seeds are ripe, turn to the latter for food. They eat
-the seeds of all kinds of troublesome weeds; and as each single seed
-might produce a plant, we cannot guess how much they destroy.
-
-Professor Beal, who is at the head of this government inquiry into the
-food of birds, and who knows what he is talking about, says that one
-species of little bird--the tree sparrow--destroys every year in one of
-the Western States, many tons of the seeds of weeds.
-
-There is a curious and interesting fact about this seed-eating. The
-regular seed-eaters, the finches, prefer the seeds of certain weeds,
-most of them harmful; these they break up, taking off the shells, and of
-course destroying the germ, making it impossible for them to grow.
-
-But there are many birds who eat berries having in them seeds, such as
-raspberries, blackberries, and all kinds of wild fruit. These birds do
-not crack the seeds; and, as they are hard, they do not digest in the
-stomach, but are dropped whole, and are ready to grow wherever they
-fall.
-
-Thus, while seed-eating birds destroy the weeds which are hurtful, the
-fruit-eaters plant the seeds of berries and fruit which we like. That is
-why we find wild berry bushes all over the country. We have to thank the
-birds for it.
-
-A great deal more could be said about the birds' work for us, not only
-of the robins and those I have spoken of, but cedar-birds, who are shot
-because they take part of our cherries, blackbirds, because they eat
-some grain, orioles, because they occasionally take green peas, and
-kingbirds, because they have the name of eating bees, though it has been
-proved that they eat only drones, which have no sting and make no honey.
-
-Let me impress upon you two facts. First, the stories of the harm done
-by birds are often mere guesswork, from careless observation. For
-instance, a man seeing a bird going over his blossoming fruit-trees, at
-once concludes he is destroying the fruit, probably shoots him, and then
-writes to his favorite paper that a certain bird eats fruit buds. Other
-papers copy it, and a war against that bird begins in every orchard.
-
-Whereas, the truth is, the bird was preserving the fruit by picking out
-the insects that would have spoiled it. This is no fancy picture; this
-very thing has happened more than once.
-
-And again, whatever is said about the harm this or that bird does, never
-forget this second fact, which I repeat, and which may be relied upon as
-perfectly trustworthy. The officers of the government of the United
-States, who have carefully studied the matter and found out positively,
-without guesswork, what birds eat, have declared emphatically that every
-bird they have examined does more good by destroying pests, than harm to
-our crops, excepting only the bird we have imported,--the English or
-house sparrow.
-
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-HOW TO ATTRACT HIM ABOUT OUR HOMES
-
-
-BECAUSE birds are so useful to us, as well as because they are so
-interesting and so beautiful, it is delightful to have them come about
-our homes. And it is not at all difficult, for they are easily taught to
-like us.
-
-In countries where people are gentle, and try to make birds happy,
-instead of shooting them or throwing stones at them, they become very
-tame. Mr. Hearn, who has written about Japan, says that the fearlessness
-of wild creatures is one of the most charming things about the remote
-parts of Japan, "where tourists with shotguns have not yet come."
-
-Travelers who visit Norway tell us that birds are never disturbed there,
-and they come freely about the houses. When it is very cold they even
-come into the houses for food and warmth, and no one thinks of
-frightening them or trying to catch them.
-
-Even in our own country, Dr. Ridgway told me of a bird-lover in Florida
-who would not let birds be annoyed on his place. As a result he had a
-great many there, and they became very tame. Cardinal grosbeaks, who are
-rather shy, were so tame they would take food from his hand.
-
-A person living in the country, wishing to draw the birds about his
-place, should begin by protecting it. Cats should not be allowed to come
-near, English sparrows should be kept down, and boys who shoot or throw
-stones should be banished from the vicinity.
-
-Next, trees and shrubs that birds like, for nesting and for food, should
-be set out. For nesting, a very attractive place for the smaller species
-is a thick hedge of bushes, the thicker and closer the better.
-
-Nesting-boxes nailed up in trees please many, and evergreen trees will
-draw some that would not come otherwise. For food, various berry-bearing
-shrubs and trees should be provided, such as chokecherry, shadberry,
-mulberry, and others.
-
-In a town or city, besides shrubs that birds like, a high fence, with a
-top that cats cannot walk on, is desirable, and a readiness to go to
-their assistance is soon appreciated.
-
-A friend told me a few days ago of a family of wood thrushes who nested
-last summer in the yard of her house in the city of Orange, N. J. The
-birds soon found out that some of the family would come to drive away
-strange cats which came in. After they learned that, when a cat appeared
-they would give a peculiar cry, unlike any other heard from them. On
-hearing this, one of the family always hurried out and drove the enemy
-away.
-
-If the birds could not get any response from a call at the kitchen door,
-they would fly to the front of the house, perch on the piazza rail, and
-call till some one came out. All through nesting-time they thus called
-on their friends for protection, and the delight the family had over the
-nest and the friendly birds amply repaid them for their trouble.
-
-The one great necessity, in both city and country, is water for drinking
-and bathing. It should be in a shallow dish. The rough saucer of a
-flower-pot is best, because the bird's feet do not slip on it, and the
-edge is broad and round and easy to perch on.
-
-Next best is an earthen dish, with clean pebbles in the bottom, to
-prevent slipping, which frightens them. Water should never be more than
-two inches deep, but should always be clean, and fresh two or three
-times a day.
-
-No food should be offered in summer, because we want them to get their
-natural food of worms and seeds.
-
-In the winter it is different. They should have food regularly. But once
-used to having their wants supplied, they will depend upon it, and
-suffer and probably starve, if they are neglected or forgotten. So one
-should be very sure he will not get tired of it, before he teaches them
-to expect food.
-
-To feed them safely, a shelf must be placed out of the reach of cats and
-bad boys. On the sill of a window is a good place, or the roof of a
-piazza, or a little balcony. Breakfast should be served to them at the
-same hour every day, and they will soon know when to come for it.
-
-For food, they will eat any table scraps of meat, and vegetables, and
-bread, chopped fine, and most kinds of grain, broken up, or crushed, for
-the smaller birds.
-
-But the thing they all like best of everything is raw suet, as it comes
-from the butcher. A large piece may be wired or nailed in place, so that
-it may be picked at and not displaced, or it may be chopped fine and
-scattered on the shelf, like other food. All birds are fond of this.
-
-In winter they need water, and it should then, also, be fresh.
-
-A lady living in southern Ohio, who has for several years given a
-breakfast to the birds every day in winter, told me that her daily
-guests last season were hairy and downy woodpeckers, nuthatches, white
-and red-breasted, one young kinglet, a pair of chickadees, tufted
-titmice, blue jays, juncos, cardinal grosbeaks, Carolina wrens, and
-sparrows.
-
-This delightful company came regularly for breakfast, and to pay her,
-sang nearly through the season.
-
-In the latitude of New York there are about forty birds who spend the
-winter, and of course there are more as one goes south. In the Southern
-States, many of our northern birds may be studied in the winter.
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-HOW TO STUDY HIM
-
-
-AN attractive thing about bird study is the fact that there is still so
-much to be found out.
-
-Men have been studying the dead bird for many years. All about the body
-is well known. The way he is made, the arrangement of his bones and his
-organs, are plainly set forth in the books, in words and pictures.
-
-The shape and colors of his plumage, how many feathers belong to his
-wing and tail, his length, his extent, the shape of his beak and his
-foot,--all these facts are to be found in every Ornithology.
-
-Some of his most easily noted habits, too, are familiar; where and when
-he nests, where he spends his time, and where he goes in the winter,
-what he eats, and when he changes his dress.
-
-But really to know the living bird, to make acquaintance with the
-individual, to see his family life, his manners, his intelligence, his
-powers,--this kind of study has hardly begun.
-
-This almost new and most attractive field is open to us to-day. It
-offers a charming study, with the added interest of discoveries to be
-made. Nor is it so hard as most persons think.
-
-In the beginning there are two things to learn: first, how to study from
-life; and second, how to identify without killing. To study is simply to
-observe closely and carefully, and to report accurately.
-
-Take a little lesson in observing: When you see a bird do not merely
-gaze idly at him, but take note of everything about him. What he is
-doing, how he is doing it, and all his points, his size and shape, his
-colors and markings.
-
-If he is getting food, as he most often is, see whether he picks it from
-the tree trunk or gathers it from grass tops; whether he hunts it among
-leaves, bores the bark, drops to the ground, or sails out into the air
-for it.
-
-Then try to discover what it is--insect or seed, beetle, grub, or
-worm--and what he does with it,--swallow it at once, beat it to death,
-or hold it in his mouth uneaten.
-
-Then notice his manners,--if he stands still, or jerks his tail or body;
-if he flits about the branches, hovers before a flower, or hammers at
-the door of an unlucky grub behind the bark. Next, does he walk or hop?
-does he chatter or keep silent? fly straight, or go bounding in great
-waves through the air? All these things you must learn to see, and to
-note down the moment you do so, so that you will not be uncertain or
-confused when you take your books to see who he is.
-
-Then you must take note of his size, and to do this--as it is hard to
-judge of inches--it is well to have in mind a sort of index of size to
-which you can compare him. Take the most common and best-known birds for
-standards, the robin, the English sparrow, and one smaller,--the wren,
-or the "chebec" (least flycatcher). When you see a bird, if he is as big
-as a robin, enter in your note: "Size, robin." Should he be a little
-smaller, yet still larger than your measure,--the English sparrow,--you
-can note it, "Size, robin -," the minus sign meaning that it is less. If
-he were larger, you would put the plus sign: "Size, robin +."
-
-Observe the shape, whether it is slim like an oriole, or chunky like a
-chickadee; also any peculiarity of plumage, as a crest, specially long
-or strangely formed tail feathers; the end of the tail, whether square,
-rounded, pointed, or notched.
-
-Then notice the beak; its length compared to the head, its shape and
-color. If it is high and thick, like a canary's or sparrow's, the bird
-is a seed-eater; if long and straight, like a robin's, he is an
-insect-eater; if sharp and flat, opening very wide like a swallow's, he
-is a flycatcher.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 18.
-
-Canadian Warbler.]
-
-Lastly, note the plumage, the general color, then special markings, such
-as bars on wings or tail, a ring around the eye (Fig. 18), or a line
-over or through the eye (Fig. 19), white or black throat (Fig. 20 or
-19), speckled or striped breast (Fig. 18), or any conspicuous blotch.
-Every point must be set down the moment you notice it. You cannot trust
-your memory.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 19.
-
-Black-throated Green Warbler.]
-
-With these full notes, return to your study and take your manual to find
-out his name, or to identify.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 20.
-
-White-throated Sparrow.]
-
-Many persons think that in order to know a bird, and especially to find
-out his name, one must have him in the hand, count his wing and tail
-feathers, and measure his length. Excepting for exact scientific
-purposes, this is not at all necessary. Almost any bird in America may
-be perfectly identified without touching him, indeed, while he is in the
-enjoyment of his liberty in a tree. For birds have marked external
-differences, which are carefully set down in the books.
-
-The modern manuals, too, are usually furnished with a color key, the use
-of which is fully explained in them. With the help of this you will have
-little trouble in naming your bird.
-
-Above all, be exact in your knowledge and do not jump at conclusions. If
-you see a bird on a fruit-tree picking about the blossoms, do not decide
-offhand that he is spoiling the fruit; look closely to see if he is not,
-instead, clearing it of worms that would destroy it all. When you notice
-a bird in a strawberry bed, do not instantly conclude that he is after
-strawberries; he doesn't care half so much for berries as he does for
-insects, and very often he is engaged in ridding the plants of pests, at
-the moment that he is scared off or shot by a careless person, who does
-not wait to see whether he is friend or foe.
-
-Although patience and clear eyes alone will open many delightful secrets
-of bird life, a good opera glass will do still more. It will bring you
-nearer to the bird without frightening him. You can see thus much
-better, not only his markings, but what he is doing. In a word, you can
-be more sure of your facts.
-
-In deciding upon the actions of a bird, never _guess_ at anything. If
-you see a pair very busy about a shrub, you may be sure they have a nest
-there, but do not so record it till you have actually seen the nest.
-Even then you should not conclude at once that it belongs to them; I
-have seen birds sit a few moments in nests which did not belong to
-them--as if to try them. You may feel very sure what a bird means by an
-action, but you should set down only what he _does_. Without this care,
-your records will be worthless.
-
-Do not discourage yourself by trying to find the name of every tiny atom
-in feathers that you see; indeed, little birds flitting about the
-tree-tops--mostly warblers--will be hard for you to identify, and almost
-impossible to watch. I advise you to confine your study at first to the
-larger and less lively birds,--kingbirds, robins, thrushes, phoebes,
-bluebirds, orioles, goldfinches, and others, all of which you will find
-near to houses and easy to study. Do not expect too much at once, nor
-give up in despair if you cannot identify the first bird you see.
-
-[Illustration: SCARLET TANAGER]
-
-You may be sure that every hour you honestly give to the study will make
-it more interesting; every bird you learn to know will be like a new and
-delightful companion.
-
-You will lose your desire to take life or even to steal eggs from them;
-the country will have new charms for you; in fact, a person blessed with
-a love of the study of birds or beasts or insects possesses a lifelong
-and inexhaustible source of interest and happiness.
-
-In regard to a manual, there are now so many to be had, one hardly knows
-how to select. I will mention only two or three, which have particular
-points of value.
-
-A good book to begin with, for residents of New England, New York, and
-the Eastern Middle States, is Professor Willcox's "Land Birds of New
-England" (Lothrop Lee & Shepard, Boston. Price 60 cts., by mail).
-
-Although this little book treats of only ninety birds, they are the most
-common, and its value is its simplicity, and the ease with which its
-color key enables one to identify the birds it treats. It introduces a
-beginner to the larger works in a most pleasing way.
-
-A good general work for Eastern North America, thoroughly trustworthy
-and not too technical in its use of terms, treating all the birds of
-the locality, is Chapman's "Handbook of the Birds of Eastern North
-America" (Appleton, New York. Price $3.00). It has a color key and a
-color chart, by which one may see what is meant by colors named.
-
-Especially attractive to ladies and amateurs, for its charming accounts
-of bird life, is Mrs. Wright's "Birdcraft" (Macmillan, New York. Price,
-$2.00). It treats but two hundred species, but that includes the birds
-usually seen in the New England and Northern Middle States. It has a
-color key.
-
-The whole United States is covered by Dr. Coues's "Key to North American
-Birds," 2 volumes (The Page Company, Boston. Price $12.50). It is not
-quite so easy for the beginner, but it is untechnical in style, and
-fully illustrated.
-
-One book deserving mention because of its value as an aid to teachers is
-Miss Merriam's "Birds of Village and Field" (Houghton Mifflin Co.,
-Boston. Price $2.00). It is exceptionally rich in facts and statistics
-relating to the economic value of birds. It treats nearly two hundred of
-the most common birds.
-
-A book intended for identification only is Professor Apgar's "Birds of
-the United States" (American Book Company, New York. Price $2.00). It is
-the result of his experience as teacher, and has several new features
-very helpful to beginners, such as small cuts at the bottom of pages to
-explain terms, thus showing exactly what is meant, for example, by "wing
-bars" or "rounded tail." It also gives hints about the usual locality of
-a bird, whether creeping over a tree trunk, on the wing, or elsewhere.
-It takes particular note of size, having one section for birds about the
-size of an English sparrow, and so on. The pronunciation of the Latin
-names is carefully indicated. There are several chapters giving
-descriptions of the external parts of a bird, and there is a glossary of
-scientific terms.
-
-The following list of points to observe in watching birds has been used
-to advantage by classes in bird study. A little familiarity with this
-will help one to remember what to look for.
-
-A similar, but fuller and more elaborate, list has been prepared, and
-bound up in tablets, to use in the field. It is for sale by Miss J. A.
-Clark, 1322 Twelfth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
-
-
-
-
-POINTS TO OBSERVE
-
- 1. Locality--tree: bush: ground.
- 2. Size--compared to robin: English sparrow.
- 3. Form--long: short: slender: plump.
- 4. Beak--high: stout: wide: hooked: long: lobes: drawn down.
- 5. Tail--length: shape at end.
- 6. Legs--long: short: scales.
- 7. Toes--webbed: how turned: hind claw long.
- 8. Color--bright: striking: dull: plain.
- 9. Markings--on head: breast: wing: tail: back.
- 10. Manners--walk: hop: quiet: active: noisy: silent.
- 11. Habits--eating seeds: berries: insects: from ground: tree
- trunk: leaves.
- 12. Song--long: short: continuous: broken.
- 13. Flight--direct: undulating: fluttering: labored.
- 14. Nest--where placed: shape: materials: eggs.
- 15. Young--plumage: behavior.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND BOOK
-
-
-
-
-THE SECOND BOOK OF BIRDS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-WHAT IS A BIRD FAMILY?
-
-
-IN the "First Book of Birds" I told you about the common life of a bird;
-what sort of a home he has, and how he is taken care of when little;
-then how he lives when grown up; what he eats; where he sleeps; and
-something about how he is made.
-
-In this book, I want to help you a step further on in your study of
-birds. I shall tell you something about particular birds, about the
-families they belong to, and the different ways in which they live.
-
-To begin with: What is a bird family? In life, a bird family is exactly
-like a human family. It consists of father, mother, and children. But in
-the books, a family means quite another thing.
-
-Men who study the Science of Birds, or Ornithology, have placed the
-birds in groups which they call families, to make it easier to find out
-about them, and write about them. This way of arranging them in books is
-called classification--or forming them into classes.
-
-Birds are classified, not by the way they look, but by the way they are
-made, or their structure, and this is found out by the study of
-Scientific Ornithology. Birds may look a good deal alike, and act alike,
-and yet be differently made.
-
-There is first the grand class AVES, which includes all creatures who
-wear feathers. This class is divided into orders.
-
-Orders are made by putting together a large number of birds who are
-alike in one thing. For instance, all birds who have feet made to clasp
-a perch, and so are perchers, are put in an order together.
-
-But many birds have feet for perching who are very different in other
-ways. So orders are divided into families, which I shall tell you about
-in this book.
-
-In each family I shall tell you about one or more of the best known, or
-the ones you are most likely to see, and that will help you to know the
-rest of the family when you begin to study birds out of doors, and use
-the manual to learn the names.
-
-I shall often speak of what has been found out about the food of birds,
-and I want to tell you here, once for all, how it was done, so that you
-may understand just what I mean when I speak of the work of the
-Department of Agriculture. The Government of the United States has in
-Washington a department with a head and many men under him, whose
-business it is to take charge of everything concerning agriculture, that
-is, farming, fruit-growing, etc. This is called the Department of
-Agriculture.
-
-Farmers and fruit-growers made so much complaint of the damage done to
-crops by birds, that this department determined to find out just what
-birds do eat. The only way it could be done was by having the birds
-killed and seeing what food was in their stomachs, for it is almost
-impossible to tell by watching them. To know positively which birds do
-harm by eating more grain or fruit than insects, and which do good by
-eating more insects, would save the lives of many thousands. So the
-killing of those they studied was useful to the whole race.
-
-When they wanted to find out what crows eat, they had crows killed all
-over the country--hundreds of them--and the stomachs, with the food in,
-sent to them in Washington. Then they went to work and examined every
-one. They could tell by the shells of seeds and the hard parts of
-insects, and bones and hair of mice, etc., just what had been eaten. And
-the contents of every stomach was written down and preserved in a book.
-Thus, you see, they could tell what crows were in the habit of feeding
-upon.
-
-They did this with many other birds who are said to do harm,--hawks,
-owls, blackbirds, kingbirds, and others. That is how we come to know
-what birds eat, and can tell whether they do harm or good. There can be
-no mistake in this way of knowing, and so what comes from this
-department may be relied upon as true.
-
-I want this little book to help the bird-lovers in the South and West of
-our big country, as well as in the East; and so, in each Family, I shall
-try to tell about a bird who may be seen in each part. A good many of
-our birds are found both East and West, with slight differences, but
-some that are in one part are not in the other.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE THRUSH FAMILY
-
-(_Turdidae_)[2]
-
-
-THIS family is named after the thrushes, but our familiar robin belongs
-to it, and also the sweet-voiced bluebird. The birds of this family are
-all rather good sized, and excepting the bluebird show no bright colors.
-Nearly all of them have spotted breasts when young, and many of them
-keep the spots all their lives. Young robins and bluebirds have spots on
-breasts and shoulders, but when they get their grown-up plumage there
-are none to be seen.
-
-The thrush family get around by hopping, and do not walk, though some of
-them run, as you have seen the robin do on the lawn. Most of them live
-in the woods, and feed on the ground, and all of them eat insects.
-Because their feeding grounds freeze up in winter, most of these birds
-go to a warmer climate, or migrate. They are all good singers, and some
-of them among the best in America.
-
-The best known of this family is the robin, AMERICAN ROBIN, to give him
-his whole name. He is found all over the United States. In the summer he
-lives in the Eastern and Middle States, in the winter he lives in the
-Southern States, and he lives all the year round in California.
-
-The California robin is called the Western Robin, and is a little
-lighter in color than his Eastern brother; but he is the same jolly
-fellow under his feathers, and robin song is about the same from the
-Atlantic to the Pacific.
-
-I'm sure you all know how he looks, with black head, slate-colored back
-and wings, streaked throat, and dull red or chestnut breast. His mate is
-not quite so dark in color.
-
-Robins start for their nesting-place, which is their real home, very
-early, almost the first of the birds. They make a nest, not very high,
-in a tree or about our houses, with a good deal of mud in it. Not all
-nests are alike. Sometimes a bird will show a fancy for a pretty-looking
-nest. I have seen one made of the white flowers of life-everlasting. The
-stems were woven together for the framework, and the little clusters of
-blossoms left outside for ornament.
-
-The young robin just out of the nest is a pretty fellow, with spots all
-over his breast and shoulders. He spends most of his time calling for
-food, for he is always hungry. He is rather clumsy in getting about, and
-often falls to the ground. But if you pick him up and put him on a low
-branch out of the reach of cats, he will fly as soon as your hand leaves
-him, and generally come to the ground again. So it is of no use to try
-to help him that way. The only thing you can do is to keep cats and bad
-boys away from him, until he flies up into a tree.
-
-The robin gets his food on the ground, or just under the surface. He
-eats many caterpillars and grubs that are harmful to us. One that he
-specially likes is the cutworm, which has a bad way of biting off young
-plants. In the East he eats many earthworms, which we see him pull out
-of the ground on the lawn, but in the West, where there are not so many
-earthworms, he picks up insects of various kinds.
-
-All through spring, when insects are hard at work destroying our fruit
-and vegetables and young grains, the robin spends almost his whole time
-catching them; first for his own eating, but many more when his little
-ones get out of the shell, for young birds eat a great amount of food.
-Then, when he has spent months in our service killing insects, so that
-our fruit and vegetables can grow, do you not think he has earned part
-of the cherries he has saved?
-
-Robins are very easily made tame, and, when well treated and not shut up
-in a cage, they become fond of people and like to live in our houses. I
-know of a robin who was picked up from the ground by a lady. He could
-not fly, and she took him into a house and brought him up. He was never
-wild or afraid of people, and he never wanted to be free. His mistress
-would sometimes put him on her hat, without fastening him in any way,
-and go out to walk with him there. He liked his ride, and never thought
-of leaving her. She often took him with her into a piece of woods where
-she went. He would play around on the ground and in the trees, but the
-moment she started for home he flew down, ready to go.
-
-She thought perhaps he would like to be free, and she tried once or
-twice to leave him in this pleasant grove, but he always flew to her and
-refused to be left. He was so fond of his mistress that when she went
-away for a day or two he was very unhappy, hid himself in a closet, and
-would not eat till she came back.
-
-This robin, too, liked the food of the family, and did not care for
-earthworms. In fact, he could hardly be coaxed to eat one of them,
-though he liked some kinds of grubs which he found on the ground. But he
-ate them in a different way from his wild brothers. He did not swallow
-them whole, but beat them to a jelly before trying to eat.
-
-This pet had a sweet, low song of his own. He never sang like his wild
-brothers until his second year, when he had been out and heard them
-sing.
-
-A pair of robins that were blown from a nest in a high wind were reared
-and kept in a large cage by Mrs. Grinnell in California. The first year
-the singer did not sing, but in the second year a wild mockingbird came
-to teach him. He would alight on the cage, which hung out of doors, and
-sing softly a long time, till the robin began to do the same. When he
-could sing, it was more like a mockingbird than like a robin. The mocker
-was very fond of his pupil, and used to bring him berries and other wild
-dainties.
-
-These robins made a nest of things the mistress gave them, and eggs
-began to appear in it. But as soon as one was laid, one of the birds
-would jump into the nest and kick and scratch till it was thrown out and
-broken. They seemed to think the pretty blue eggs were playthings. When
-the weather grew hot, Bobby, the singer, showed his sense by spending
-most of his time lying in his bathing-dish, covered with water up to his
-ears. He would lie there an hour at a time, too comfortable to get out
-even to eat.
-
-[Illustration: HERMIT THRUSH]
-
-Birds who are not brought into the house often become tame when well
-treated. One family in Michigan had a pair of robins who nested close to
-the house for fourteen years. It was plain that the birds were the same
-pair, for they became so friendly that they let any of the family pick
-up a nestling, and showed no fear. But with other people they were as
-wild as any robins.
-
-One day a man passing by picked up one of the young birds, who was
-scrambling about on the ground. At once the parents began loud cries of
-distress, and all the robins in the neighborhood came to help. They
-scolded and cried, and flew at the thief who wanted to carry off the
-baby. One of the family heard the row, and went out and claimed the
-robin, and the man gave it up. The moment the little one was in the
-hands of a person they knew, the cries ceased. Not only the parents but
-the neighbors seemed to understand that the nestling was safe.
-
-The way birds act when brought up by us and not by their parents shows
-that young birds are taught many things before they are grown up. When
-living in a house, they are not afraid of cats or people, as wild
-ones are. They do not usually sing the robin song, nor care for the
-robin food, and they do not seem to know how to manage a nest. I could
-tell you many things to prove this.
-
-
-Another charming member of the Thrush Family is the HERMIT THRUSH. He is
-a beautiful bird, smaller than the robin. He is reddish brown on the
-back, with a white breast spotted with dark brown or black. He has
-large, full, dark eyes, which look straight at you.
-
-The hermit thrush spends his winters in the Southern States, and his
-summers in the Northern. But in the far West, where are no cold winters,
-the hermit does not have to move back and forth. In that part of the
-country the bird is the Western Hermit Thrush.
-
-This bird is one of our finest singers, and a very shy bird. His home is
-in the woods, and from there we hear his loud, clear song, morning and
-evening. Many people think his song is the finest bird-song we have. His
-ordinary call as he goes about is a kind of "chuck." The Western hermit
-differs hardly at all. He may be a little smaller, but he is the same
-delightful singer and lovely character.
-
-The mother hermit makes her nest on the ground, and hides it so well
-that it is hard to find,--though I'm afraid snakes, and squirrels, and
-other woods creatures who like eggs to eat find it more often than we
-do.
-
-Shy as the hermit is, he is an intelligent bird. A mother hermit a few
-years ago strayed into the grounds of a gentleman in Massachusetts and
-built a nest under a pine-tree. When she was found, she was at first
-very much frightened. But the owner of the place was a bird-lover, and
-gentle and quiet in his ways, and she got so used to him that she let
-him photograph her many times.
-
-A gentleman, Mr. Owen, once captured a young hermit thrush so lately out
-of the nest that he could not fly much. He kept him in the house several
-weeks, and found out many interesting things about young thrushes. One
-thing he discovered was that the bird has his own notions about food. He
-ate raw meat and earthworms. But when worms were fed to him that came
-from a dirty place, he threw them out of his mouth, wiped his beak, and
-showed great disgust. The worms brought from clean garden earth he ate
-greedily.
-
-The little captive had his own way of eating a worm. He began by
-worrying it awhile, and then swallowed it tail first.
-
-He showed his instinct for sleeping high by being very restless at
-night, till let out of his cage. Then he flew to the highest perch he
-could find in the room, and roosted for the night.
-
-The bird showed himself friendly and not at all afraid of people. Mr.
-Owen got so attached to him that when he let him go in the woods he felt
-as if he had parted with a dear friend.
-
-In the picture you see two hermit thrushes. The upper one is singing,
-and the lower one looking calmly at you, in the way of these beautiful
-birds.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[2] See Appendix, 1.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE KINGLET AND GNATCATCHER FAMILY
-
-(_Sylviidae_)[3]
-
-
-THIS family is small in our country. There are only three members of it
-that we are likely to see. But they are most dainty and lovely birds.
-They are the two kinglets or little kings, not much bigger than
-hummingbirds, and the blue-gray gnatcatcher, about as small. They are
-all fond of living in the tops of tall trees, and they generally get
-their food and make their pretty nests away out of our reach. So we have
-to look sharp to see them. It is easier to hear them, for they are fine
-singers.
-
-
-The RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET is a plump little bird in olive-green feathers.
-Below he is yellowish white, and he has two whitish wing bars. On top of
-his head is a narrow stripe of bright ruby color. But we see him usually
-from below, so that is not often noticed. He flits about the upper
-branches, picking out the smallest insects and insect eggs, and eating
-them. So he is very useful to us.
-
-[Illustration: RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET]
-
-Although this bird is found all over our country, he does not nest with
-us, except sometimes in the mountains. He goes farther north, beyond the
-United States. The nests that have been found in the mountains of
-Colorado and Montana were partly hanging, and very large for such a tiny
-bird. They were made of soft, fine bark strips, and green moss, and hung
-to the end of a spruce or pine branch.
-
-But the ruby-crown passes his winters in the Southern States and Mexico,
-and when he starts for his nesting-home, he begins to sing. As he goes
-north, he stops a few days or a week in a place, and then is the time to
-hear his sweet voice. When he sings, you would hardly know him. He
-raises the red feathers on top of his head so that they stand up like a
-crown, and change his looks very much. In the picture you can see a
-little of the ruby stripe.
-
-Not much is known of the habits of these little birds, they are so hard
-to study. They are found all over the United States, in the Southern
-States and California in winter, and in the Northern States in spring
-and fall, when migrating.
-
-The BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER is a slim little bird, with a rather long
-tail. He is bluish gray, with some white and black on head, wings, and
-tail, and he is grayish white below.
-
-He has a sweet song, but it is so low you have to be very near and very
-quiet to hear it. He is such a talkative, restless fellow, however, that
-you often see him when you might not hear the song.
-
-The gnatcatcher is one of the most lively of birds. He bustles about in
-an eager way that shows everybody where to look for the nest. And when
-there is no nest, he flits over the tree-tops, catching tiny flying
-insects, and uttering a queer call that sounds something like the mew of
-a cat. He does not need to be so quiet as birds who build on the ground
-or near it, because few can get at the nest. It is too high for snakes
-and boys, and on branches too light for squirrels or big birds. So he
-can afford to be as chatty as he pleases.
-
-The nest of this bird is one of the prettiest that is made. It is a
-little cup, upright on a branch, usually near the end so that it is
-tossed by the wind. Miss Merriam found a pair of gnatcatchers in
-California, and watched them through many troubles. Their way of
-building was by felting. That is, they took fine, soft materials like
-plant down, and packed it all closely together by poking with the beak
-and prodding it with the feet.
-
-A gnatcatcher's nest is large for the size of the bird. It must be deep
-for safety, so that eggs and nestlings will not be thrown out by the
-wind. Three times, Miss Merriam thinks, the little family she watched
-had to build their nest. Each time it took more than ten days of hard
-work.
-
-This pretty little fellow has a long tail, and he keeps it in motion all
-the time. He jerks it up or down, or twitches it to one side or the
-other; or he flirts it open and shut like a fan, which shows the white
-edges and looks very gay.
-
-Dogs and cats, as you know, show how they feel by the way they move the
-tail. Birds do the same, some much more than others. If you watch the
-way in which they move their tails, you can learn to tell how a bird
-feels almost as well as if he could speak to you.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[3] See Appendix, 2.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-THE NUTHATCH AND CHICKADEE FAMILY
-
-(_Paridae_)[4]
-
-
-THIS is another family of small birds. The nuthatches are lively,
-restless little creatures. You generally see them scrambling over the
-trunks of trees, head up or head down, as it happens. They are dressed
-in sober colors, and spend their lives picking tiny insects out of the
-crevices of the bark.
-
-
-The WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH is the best known in the East. In California
-the slender-billed takes his place, being about the same in dress and
-manners. Both of them, East and West, go about calling "quank, quank."
-The dress is slate-blue and white, with a white breast, a black cap, and
-black on wings and tail.
-
-Nuthatches nest in holes, either deserted woodpecker nests or natural
-holes in trees. If such a place is not to be found, the pair will
-sometimes dig out a home in a decayed stump for themselves.
-
-It is wonderful to see how easily and quickly a nuthatch will run over
-the trunk and large branches of a tree. Woodpeckers usually go upward,
-and brace themselves with their stiff tails. If they want to go down,
-they back down rather awkwardly. Creepers, who also go over tree trunks,
-go up only, and they also use their stiff tails for a brace. But the
-nuthatch goes head up, or down, or sideways, and never uses the short,
-square tail in the business. He can do this because his claws are very
-curving, almost like hooks, and they grasp tight hold of the little
-rough places in the bark.
-
-It is a funny sight to see a mother nuthatch going about with four or
-five hungry little ones after her, like chickens after a hen, all
-calling their droll little "quanks."
-
-The nuthatch gets his name, it is said, from the habit of fixing a nut
-into a crack and hammering or "hacking" it till it breaks. In summer,
-when insects are to be had, this bird, like many others, eats nothing
-else, and he eats thousands of them. But he can live on other food, so
-he is not forced to migrate.
-
-To provide for winter, when insects will be gone and snow cover the
-seeds, he lays up a store of food. He takes kernels of corn, if he can
-get them, or sunflower seeds, or nuts of various kinds. This keeps him
-very busy all the fall, and he has often been seen at the work. He will
-carry a nut to a tree and find a crack in the bark just big enough to
-hold it. He tries one after another till he finds one to fit. Then he
-hammers it in till it is secure, and leaves it there. Then in winter the
-same bird has been seen, when everything was covered with snow, to dig
-the hidden nuts out of their hiding-places and eat them.
-
-Many birds who do not migrate, but live in the same place the year
-round, provide for winter in the same way. So do squirrels and other
-animals. It is pleasant to think that rough-barked trees, and knotholes,
-and hollows, are filled with food for the hungry birds. And if they had
-not that supply, they might starve, or be obliged to leave us.
-
-
-The RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH is a little smaller than the white-breasted,
-and has a reddish breast. His home is more toward the north, both East
-and West. He nests in Maine and other Northern States. His call note is
-different too. It sounds like the squawk of a toy trumpet. His habits
-are much like those of his bigger relative.
-
-The nuthatch is fond of his mate, and takes good care of her in nesting
-time. He feeds her and the young till they leave the nest.
-
-Mr. Fowler tells a story of an English nuthatch who is almost the same
-as one of ours. Some bird-lovers were in the habit of putting nuts on a
-window-sill for these birds to carry away. One day, to see what they
-would do, somebody put one in a glass tumbler. The birds saw the nut and
-tried to get it through the glass, pecking and hammering at it a long
-time. Finally, one got tired or discouraged and flew up to a perch over
-the tumbler. Then he happened to look down, and saw the nut inside the
-glass. Instantly he came down. He alighted on the edge of the tumbler
-and held on tightly, while he leaned far over inside, almost standing on
-his head, till he picked up the nut and carried it off.
-
-These birds are easily made tame in winter by feeding them every day
-when food is hard to get; and at a time when they are forced to live on
-seeds and nuts, they greatly enjoy scraps of meat, and most of all,
-suet. Many people put out food for the birds every day in winter, in
-some safe place where cats cannot come. They have great pleasure in
-watching their little guests.
-
-[Illustration: BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEES]
-
-Chickadees, or Titmice, as they are named in the books, belong to
-another branch of this Family. There are a good many titmice in the
-world, seventy-five kinds or species, but we in America have only
-thirteen. Best known in the Eastern and Middle States is the common
-chickadee. In California, the mountain chickadee has habits about the
-same, and the Southern States have the tufted titmouse.
-
-All these little fellows are pretty birds in gray, set off with black
-and white, with lovely soft and fluffy plumage.
-
-
-The common CHICKADEE and his brother of the West have black on top of
-the head and on the throat, and white at the side of the head. They nest
-in holes in a tree or stump. If they can find the old home of a
-woodpecker, they are glad to get it, but if they cannot find one, they
-are able to cut one out for themselves, though it is a hard, long job
-for them.
-
-These birds have very large families, sometimes as many as eight or nine
-little chickadees in one of those dark nurseries. How so many can live
-there it is hard to see. They must be all in a heap.
-
-Everybody knows the common call of the chickadee,--"chick-a-dee-dee;"
-but he has a song, too. It is slow, sad-sounding, and of two notes,
-almost like the common cry of the phoebe. But you must not think they
-have no more than these few notes. They have odd little songs, and they
-make queer sounds that seem much like talking. Almost all birds have
-many notes and calls and little chatty noises of different sorts,
-besides their regular song and the common call note. To hear these, and
-learn to know a bird whatever he says, is one of the delights of bird
-study. I hope you will some day enjoy it. The Chippewa Indians named the
-chickadee "kitch-kitch-ga-ne-shi."
-
-A chickadee is a friendly little fellow. Many times one has come down on
-to a man's hand or knee. Mr. Torrey once found a pair making their nest,
-and he climbed up on to a branch of the tree, close by where they were
-working, so as to watch them. Many birds would have been frightened to
-have a man so near, but not the brave little chickadees. They stared at
-him a little, but went right on with their building.
-
-These birds, though so tiny, are among the most useful to us, because
-they spy out and destroy the insect eggs hidden in crevices of bark, or
-under leaves. Bigger birds might not care to pick up such small things,
-or their beaks might be too clumsy to get at them.
-
-When you see a chickadee scrambling over a tree, hanging head down with
-all sorts of antics, he is no doubt hunting out the eggs. These eggs, if
-left, would hatch out into hungry insects, to eat the leaves or fruit,
-or to injure and perhaps kill the tree. The nuthatch clears up the trunk
-and large limbs, and the chickadee does the same for the small branches
-and around the leaves.
-
-It has been found out that one pair of chickadees with their young will
-destroy five hundred pests, such as caterpillars, flies, and grubs,
-every day. No man could do so much, if he gave his whole time to it.
-Besides, he could not go over the whole tree as a bird does, without
-doing harm to it. A chickadee hops along the small branches and twigs,
-looking under every leaf, sometimes hanging head down to see the under
-side, and picks up every insect or egg. Among his dainties are the eggs
-of the leaf-rolling caterpillar, the canker-worm, and the apple-tree
-moth,--all very troublesome creatures.
-
-
-The TUFTED TITMOUSE is more common in the South and West than his
-cousin, the chickadee, and he is one of the prettiest of the family. He
-is dressed in soft gray, with a fine, showy, pointed crest. His ways are
-something like the chickadee's, but he is, perhaps, even bolder and
-more pert, and he is easily tamed. All his notes are loud and clear, and
-he is never for a moment still.
-
-In winter, this bird is found in little flocks of a dozen or more. These
-are probably all of one family, the parents and their two broods of the
-year. He is one of the birds who stores up food for a time when food is
-scarce. In summer, he eats only insects.
-
-The tufted titmouse, like others of his race, has a great deal of
-curiosity. I have heard of one who came into a house through an open
-window. It was a female titmouse in search of a good place for a nest.
-After she had been in all the rooms, and helped herself to whatever she
-found that was good to eat, she seemed to decide that it was a land of
-plenty and she would stay.
-
-The stranger settled upon a hanging basket as nice to build in. The
-family did not disturb her, and she brought in her materials and made
-her nest. She had even laid two or three eggs, when the people began to
-take too much interest in her affairs, and the bird thought it best to
-move to a safer place.
-
-Another of these birds in Ohio, looking about for something nice and
-soft to line her nest, pitched upon a gentleman's hair. Unfortunately,
-he had need of the hair himself; but the saucy little titmouse didn't
-mind that. She alighted on his head, seized a beakful, and then bracing
-herself on her stout little legs, she actually jerked out the lock, and
-flew away with it. So well did she like it that she came back for more.
-The gentleman was a bird-lover, and was pleased to give some of his hair
-to such a brave little creature.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] See Appendix, 3.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE CREEPER FAMILY
-
-(_Certhiidae_)[5]
-
-
-THIS is a family of birds who creep; that is, they appear not to hop up
-a tree trunk like a woodpecker, or walk up like a nuthatch, but they hug
-close to the bark with claws and tail, and seem really to creep.
-
-
-The one member of the family in this country is called the BROWN
-CREEPER. He is a little fellow in streaks and stripes of brown, and he
-looks so much like the tree trunks that one can hardly see him. He has a
-slender, curved bill, just the thing to poke into cracks in the bark,
-and pull out the insects and eggs hidden there. His tail feathers are
-curious. They have sharp points on the ends, so that he can press them
-against the bark, and help support himself.
-
-The creeper's way of getting up a trunk is to begin near the ground, and
-go round and round the trunk till he reaches the lowest branch. Then he
-flings himself off, and flies to the roots of another tree, and goes up
-that in the same way. A brown creeper once came into a house, and found
-it so comfortable, and food so plentiful, and people so kind, that he
-stayed. He was very tame, and his great pleasure was to climb up a man's
-leg or a woman's skirt, exactly as he climbs a tree trunk, going round
-and round.
-
-[Illustration: BROWN CREEPER]
-
-Quiet and demure as he looks, this little bird sometimes plays rather
-funny pranks. He has been seen to whirl around like a top, and again to
-fly up and down close to a tree trunk, apparently just for fun. He has a
-sweet little song, which we do not often hear, for his voice is not
-strong.
-
-The brown creeper mother takes a droll place for a nest. It is behind
-the loose bark of an old tree. She makes a snug little home under the
-bark roof, and lines it with feathers, and there she brings up her three
-or four little creepers. She is as well protected from sun and rain as
-if she had an umbrella, and it is such an odd place that it was not for
-a long time known where her cunning little nest was made.
-
-This bird nests in the Eastern States, in northern New York and New
-England, and in California he nests in the mountains, but he goes
-South in winter. When he wants to hide, he makes use of a clever trick,
-which shows that he knows how much he looks like the trunk of a tree. He
-simply flattens himself against the bark, and keeps perfectly still.
-Then you can hardly see him, though you look right at him. You can see
-in the picture how he looks.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[5] See Appendix, 4.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY
-
-(_Troglodytidae_)[6]
-
-FIRST BRANCH
-
-
-THIS is a family of singers, who dress in plain colors. There is not a
-red or blue stripe, and not a yellow or purple feather, among them.
-
-The family has two branches, or subfamilies as the books call them. The
-first branch, which gives the name to the family, is made of birds who
-are really a sort of cave-dwellers,--the wrens.
-
-Wrens are lively little birds, excitable and afraid of nothing. They are
-in plain browns, barred off with another shade of the same color. They
-are so near the color of the ground, where they spend most of their
-time, that they are not easily seen. They have a way of holding their
-tails up, some of them much more than others, by which one may know a
-wren wherever he sees it.
-
-
-The most common one of the family is the HOUSE WREN. He is found all
-over the Eastern States. In the Western States the same bird, except in
-the shade of his coat, is called the Western House Wren.
-
-The house wren is fond of a snug place for a nest. If a wren box is to
-be had, he will take that; but if not, he will seek some cozy nook,
-which he will furnish, mostly with fine twigs, and then wait for his
-mate to appear.
-
-Sometimes the bird takes queer places to live in. I once found a wren
-family inside a hollow iron hitching-post in a city street. The birds
-went in through the hole for the hitching-strap. I wondered how the
-wrenlings would get out through the long, dark passage. Another nest was
-made in an oriole's hanging cradle, after the young orioles had flown.
-It was filled up with sticks to make it suitable for baby wrens. One
-that I found last summer was in a hole in a gate-post.
-
-The place is usually chosen by the male, who stuffs it full of fine
-twigs, and then sings and calls for his mate to come. He will sing hour
-after hour his sweet little song, stopping every few minutes to bring
-another stick to add to his store.
-
-The wren is a droll fellow about one thing,--he never knows when he has
-enough furniture for his house. He will bring twigs and stuff them into
-the box or hole, till he can't get another one in. Sometimes even till
-his mate can't get in herself. A pair began to build in a shed room, and
-apparently set out to fill the whole room with twigs. They brought in so
-much stuff that the owner had to stop up the hole they used for a door
-and make them go somewhere else. He was willing to share the room with
-them, but he couldn't spare the whole.
-
-The house wren is a plucky little fellow, and as he likes the same kind
-of places the English sparrow wants, they often quarrel over a box or a
-nice snug hole. Small as he is, the wren often succeeds in keeping the
-place he wants, and driving the sparrow away.
-
-English sparrows can be kept out of wren houses by making the opening
-too small for the bigger bird. An auger hole one inch in diameter will
-be large enough for wrens, but too small for sparrows. A sparrow has
-sometimes been seen trying to get into one of these wren boxes, and very
-droll he looks, when he sticks his head in, and struggles and kicks
-violently to push himself in.
-
-I found a pair of house wrens in Colorado one summer. The singer spent
-most of his time scrambling about a pile of brush, apparently trying to
-make me think that was where he lived. But I was sure he had a mate and
-a nest somewhere else, and I kept watch for them.
-
-One day I happened to see a little brown bird fly up under the eaves of
-a summer cottage not much bigger than a tent. On looking closely, I
-found that there were openings under the eaves. The birds had taken one
-of these for a door, and built a nest inside, in the box frame over a
-window. After that I looked at them through another window. Everything
-went well till the wrenlings left the nest and began to fly around. Then
-they seemed to lose their wits, or not to mind their parents. They flew
-wildly about in the cottage, bumping against the glass, and seeming not
-able to find the door to get out.
-
-I had not the key to open the big door, so I could not help them in
-their trouble. And the old birds were so frantic when I looked in at the
-window, while they were trying to get their family out, that I went away
-and left them. In an hour or two I went back, and found everything
-quiet, and the wren babies all out on the trees.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[6] See Appendix, 5.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-THE CAVE-DWELLING FAMILY
-
-SECOND BRANCH
-
-
-THE second branch of this family is very different from the first; it is
-composed of mockingbirds, catbirds, and thrashers. These birds were once
-placed with the thrushes, and by habits and manners they seem to belong
-there. But, as I told you, families in the bird world are made by
-structure,--by the way the bird is made. These birds have scales on the
-leg, and some other things like the wrens, so now they belong to the
-cave-dwelling family, though they never dwell in caves. They live in
-shrubbery and low trees. They are larger than any wren, but they are
-like those birds in being good singers and dressed in plain colors.
-Wherever they are placed in the books, they are interesting and
-delightful birds to know.
-
-
-The most famous of this branch is the MOCKINGBIRD, found in the Southern
-States and California. He is a beautiful and graceful fellow in gray,
-with large white patches in his wings.
-
-The nest of the mockingbird is a rather rough affair, built in a low
-tree or a bush. One that I saw was in a tree about as high as an
-apple-tree. The bird gets his food on the ground, and has a curious
-habit of lifting his wings as he is about to attack a beetle.
-
-The mockingbird is a celebrated singer. Many persons think him the
-finest in America. He is especially famous for repeating the notes of
-other birds; but he can imitate other sounds, such as a policeman's
-rattle, a postman's whistle, and almost anything else. Sometimes a caged
-one makes mischief by this accomplishment. He has no need to borrow, for
-he has a fine song of his own.
-
-Besides being famous in this way, he is a very knowing bird, and a most
-interesting one to study. The young mocker is a spirited fellow, who
-can't endure to stay in the nest till his wings are strong enough to
-bear him. He usually tries to fly too soon, and so comes to the ground.
-Coming to the ground is a great misfortune to the bird, for he is easily
-caught and put in a cage.
-
-Being fine singers, mockingbirds are often kept in cages. In the late
-summer, the bird stores in New York have hundreds of them for sale,
-birds so young that they still wear the speckled bibs of baby-days. Many
-of them die, and so every year they are growing more rare.
-
-[Illustration: CATBIRD]
-
-A lady wrote me the story of a young mockingbird, whose mother saved it
-from a cage. The little fellow was just out of the nest, and could not
-fly far, and a young man thought he would catch him and take him to his
-sister; but the mother bird wished to save him from such a fate.
-
-When the man went toward the youngster on the ground, the mother flew
-down, seized him, lifted him up, and flew away with him. She carried him
-a little way and then let go. He flew as far as he could, but soon came
-to the ground again. Then the man started for him. Again the anxious
-mother flew down and lifted him into the air, and again he flew a little
-and fell to the ground. So it went on for some time, till the young man
-began to feel ashamed of himself. Then he took up the cage and went
-away, leaving the little one to his mother's care.
-
-The mockingbird is one of our most knowing birds, and when one is tamed
-and free in a house, he is very amusing. He is as full of fun as a
-catbird, and as funny to watch. A true story was told in one of the
-papers, of a captive who had some queer tricks. One was hunting in a
-workbox for a paper of needles, taking it down to the floor, and working
-it open, then suddenly giving it a jerk that sent the needles in a
-shower all over the floor.
-
-This bird was once shut up in a room alone, while the family were at
-table. He did not like it, for he wanted to be with them; so he amused
-himself unwinding all the spools of thread in the workbox. He took one
-end of the thread and carried it all about the room, around everything
-and over everything--vases on the shelf, pictures on the wall,
-chair-legs, sofas, and lamps. Everything in the room was tied together,
-so that no one could go in lest something should be thrown down. The
-naughty bird was delighted with his mischief. He sat there singing at
-the top of his voice. The only way the family could get into the room
-was to get scissors and cut their way in. They found empty spools all
-over the floor, and hundreds of yards of thread used.
-
-
-The CATBIRD is dressed in plain slate-color. He is a near relative of
-the mockingbird, and better known in the Eastern States. He is also a
-fine singer, though he is not so famous. This is partly because he sings
-usually from the middle of a thick bush and so is not seen, and partly
-because he does not sing so loud. There is a great charm in the
-catbird's song.
-
-The catbird is a charming fellow aside from his music. He is as knowing
-as the mockingbird, and not much afraid of people. He will come near to
-houses to nest, and if not frightened or disturbed, he will be very
-familiar.
-
-Like many other birds, the catbird is kind to others in trouble. A pair
-had a nest near that of a pair of robins. One day the robins
-disappeared--killed, no doubt--and the young in the nest began to cry.
-When one of the catbirds came with food for its own nestlings, the robin
-babies would cry to be fed too. Pretty soon the catbirds began to feed
-them. And at night, when bird babies need to be covered up by the warm
-feather-bed of their mother's breast, one of the friendly catbirds
-filled her place, and kept them warm all night. So it went on till both
-families were grown up and could fly.
-
-One writer says: "All day long the catbird watches over the fruit-trees,
-and kills the insects that would destroy them or the fruit. Of course he
-takes his share, especially of cherries, but for every one he takes, he
-eats thousands of insects. Where there are no small birds, there will be
-no fruit." Thirty grasshoppers have been found in one small catbird's
-stomach by the Department of Agriculture.
-
-A story showing how much the catbird knows and understands is of one in
-Iowa who had a nest in some vines over a porch. A tornado tore the vines
-so as to uncover the nest, and the lady of the house feared some one
-would disturb it. So she began to draw the vines together around it to
-hide it. While she was doing this, one of the old birds came and began
-to shriek, and cry, and fly round her head, threatening to dash at her
-eyes. The mate came too, and acted in the same way, supposing, no doubt,
-that she was doing some harm to their nest. She shielded her head and
-finished the work, and went into the house.
-
-The next morning she was sitting on the balcony the other side of the
-house. All at once a catbird flew down and perched on the railing within
-six feet of her, which no catbird had ever done before. She kept still,
-and he began jerking his body and uttering sweet little calls and
-twitters, turning his head this side and that, with eyes fixed on her.
-He acted exactly as if he were talking to her, and after a while he
-broke out with a song, low and very sweet. She sat still, and after the
-song he began his twittering again, then sang once more. She had never
-heard anything so beautiful, and she was sure that he was trying to
-express his thanks to her, and his regrets at the way he had treated her
-the day before. At least, that was the way it seemed to her.
-
-A catbird is as full of fun and pranks as a mockingbird. He may
-sometimes be seen to do what looks like playing jokes on others. A lady
-told me she saw a catbird drive a crow nearly wild by mocking his "caw."
-He cawed as well as the crow himself, and the crow was furious, dashing
-down at his small tormentor, and in every way showing anger at what no
-doubt seemed a great insult.
-
-
-The THRASHER, or BROWN THRUSH, is also of this family. He is reddish
-brown on the back, and heavily spotted on the breast, and he has a long
-tail which he jerks about a good deal.
-
-He is known all over the Eastern and Southern States, and his California
-brother is almost exactly like him. He is a fine singer, and has been
-called the French mockingbird. Sometimes it is hard to tell his song
-from the mockingbird's.
-
-The thrasher's nest is usually made in a bush, the thickest and
-thorniest that can be found, and the brave little parents will make a
-great fight to keep their nestlings from harm. At one time, when a boy
-went to carry off some young thrashers, the old birds called together
-quite an army of birds to help defend them. There were at least fifty
-birds of many kinds, all flying around his head, screaming at him and
-trying to pick at his eyes. The boy was ashamed, and put back the little
-ones, glad to get away with his eyes safe.
-
-A Western bird, the Arizona thrasher, builds a nest in the middle of a
-cactus so full of sharp thorns like fine needles that it is a wonder how
-the birds can get into it. They pull off the thorns to make a passage,
-but the nestlings do sometimes get caught and die there. They must,
-however, be safe from most enemies. One pair that Mr. Palmer tells about
-built a regular hallway of sticks six or eight inches long.
-
-All the birds of this family have great individuality; that is, no two
-are alike. The better you know birds, the more you will see that they do
-not act, or sing, or even look exactly alike. That is one reason why
-they are so interesting to study.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE DIPPER FAMILY
-
-(_Cinclidae_)[7]
-
-
-THERE is only one member of this family in the United States, and that
-one lives in the Rocky Mountains and the mountains of California. It is
-the AMERICAN DIPPER, or WATER OUZEL.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN DIPPER]
-
-The body of the ouzel is about as big as a robin's, but looks much
-smaller, because his very short tail gives him a "chunky" look. His
-wings are short and rounded, and his plumage is very soft and so thick
-that he can go under water without getting wet. He is slate-color all
-over, a little paler on the breast, and his mate is exactly like him,
-but the young ouzel has all the under feathers tipped with white, and
-usually a white throat. Both old and young have shining white eyelids
-which show very plainly among their dark feathers.
-
-The dipper is a water lover. The nest is placed close to it,
-generally near a waterfall, sometimes even behind a waterfall, where he
-has to go through a curtain of falling water to reach it. It is on a
-shelf of rock, and shaped like a little hut, with a hole on one side for
-a door. It is made of soft green moss, which is kept alive and growing
-by constant sprinkling. Sometimes the waterfall itself keeps it wet, but
-the birds have been seen to sprinkle it themselves. They do it by diving
-into the water, then going to the top of the nest and shaking themselves
-violently.
-
-This bird is a curious fellow. His food is the small insects which live
-under water, and he is as much at home there as other birds are in the
-air. He can walk on the bottom with swift running water over his head,
-and he can really fly under water, using his wings as he does in the
-air. I have seen him do it.
-
-The water ouzel cares nothing for the cold. On cold mornings when all
-other birds sit humped up with feathers puffed out over their feet to
-keep warm, he is as jolly and lively as ever. He flies about in the
-snow, dives under the ice, and comes out at an airhole, and sings as if
-it were summer weather.
-
-Mr. John Muir, who knows so well the Western mountains and the creatures
-who live there, has told us most of what we know about this bird. He
-says the ouzel sings all winter, and never minds the weather; also that
-he never goes far from the stream. If he flies away, he flies close over
-the brook, and follows all its windings and never goes "across lots."
-
-When the young ouzel is out of the nest and wants to be fed, he stands
-on a rock and "dips," that is, bends his knees and drops, then stands up
-straight again. He looks very droll.
-
-Dr. Merriam tells a story which shows how fond the dipper is of water,
-especially of a sprinkle, and explains why he always chooses to live by
-a waterfall. The doctor was camping out on the bank of a stream where
-one of these birds lived, and one morning he threw some water out of a
-cup. Instantly the bird flew into the little shower as if he liked it.
-To see if he really wanted to get into the water, the doctor threw out
-some more. Again the bird flew into it, and as long as he would throw
-out water, the ouzel would dash in for his sprinkle.
-
-Besides showing that the water ouzel likes water, this little story
-shows another thing,--that birds are not naturally afraid of us. On
-far-off islands where men have seldom been, birds do not run away from
-people. They have not learned to fear them. They will come up to men,
-perch on their shoulders, and ride with them on their boats. I have read
-that in Norway, where everybody is kind to birds, they are not at all
-afraid. They will come into a barn or a house when the weather is cold,
-or they are hungry, and no man or boy thinks of frightening or hurting
-them.
-
-Mr. C. Lloyd Morgan has reared many birds by hatching the eggs in an
-incubator, so that they cannot be taught by their parents. He says that
-the birds of the wildest parents hatched in that way are never afraid of
-people who move quietly, or of a cat, or a quiet dog. Any sudden
-movement startles a young bird, but they are as much afraid of a dead
-leaf blown by the wind as they are of a hawk. It is the suddenness that
-alarms them. Some of them stop instantly on a sudden noise, like a
-sneeze or a cough. If one foot happens to be raised to step, they will
-hold it so, and if the head is one side, it will stay so, exactly as if
-they were all turned to stone.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[7] See Appendix, 6.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-THE WAGTAIL FAMILY
-
-(_Motacillidae_)[8]
-
-
-IT does not seem very polite to call a family of birds wagtails, just
-because they have the habit of jerking their tails as they go about. But
-that is the name they go by in the books, and we have two of them in the
-United States. We call them pipits or titlarks.
-
-
-The best known is SPRAGUE'S PIPIT, called the Missouri skylark, or
-sometimes the prairie skylark. This bird gets the name of skylark
-because he sings while soaring about in the air far over our heads. He
-could not sing on a tree if he wanted to, for he lives on the plains
-between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains, where are few or
-no trees.
-
-[Illustration: SPRAGUE'S PIPIT]
-
-The pipits live on the ground, and walk and run, not hop. As they go,
-they bob their heads, and jerk their tails. They are a little larger
-than an English sparrow, and they go in flocks. They are never seen in
-the woods, but in open pastures or plains, or beside a road.
-
-Sprague's Pipit is all in streaks of brown and gray, and lighter below.
-He has a large foot, which shows that he lives on the ground, and a very
-long claw on the hind toe.
-
-The nest of the pipit is made by hollowing out a little place in the
-ground and lining it with fine grasses. Though on the ground, it is one
-of the hardest to find, because it is lightly covered with the dry
-grasses, and when the bird is sitting, she matches the grasses so well
-that one can hardly see her, even when looking right at her.
-
-The birds eat insects and weed seeds, and go about in flocks. Even then
-they are hard to see, because when they are startled they do not flutter
-or fly, but crouch or squat at once, and stay perfectly still.
-
-This bird is noted, as I said, for his song. It is said to be as fine as
-that of the English skylark of which we hear so much. Perhaps his way of
-singing makes it still more interesting. He starts up on wing, flies a
-little one way, then the other, all the time going higher and higher. So
-he climbs on up, up, up, in a zigzag way, till he is fairly out of
-sight, all the time giving a wonderfully sweet song. It is not very
-loud, but of such a kind that it is heard when the bird is far out of
-sight. When he can no longer be seen, one may still follow him with a
-good field-glass. He will sing without stopping for fifteen or twenty
-minutes.
-
-Then suddenly he stops, closes his wings, and comes head first towards
-the ground. It seems as if he would dash his brains out against the
-earth, but just before he touches, he opens his wings and alights like a
-feather, almost where he started from. He should be as famous as the
-English bird, and will be, no doubt, when he is better known.
-
-One of the things which make bird-study so interesting to us is that
-there is so much to be found out about our birds. European birds have
-been studied much longer, but we have still many beautiful ones whose
-manners and ways of living are almost unknown. These things are left for
-you young folk to find out when you are grown up.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[8] See Appendix, 7.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-THE WARBLER FAMILY
-
-(_Mniotiltidae_)[9]
-
-
-THE gayest, the liveliest, and almost the smallest of our birds are the
-warblers. Some of them are not over five inches long from the tip of the
-beak to the end of the tail. Almost all wear bright colors, and the pair
-are never alike, while the youngsters are different from both.
-
-But few of them warble. Then why are they named so? Well, I haven't
-found out; but we must call them warblers because that is their name in
-the books. Most of them have funny little songs of a few notes, which
-they jerk out every minute as they scramble about on the trees.
-
-We have seventy species of these little birds in the United States, and
-every one is working as hard as he can from morning till night, for our
-benefit. For every one eats insects, and enormous numbers of them. Some
-scramble over trees and pick them out from bud and blossom and under
-leaves, others go over the bark, and others fly out like flycatchers.
-
-Some of them work in the tops of tall trees, others work in the
-orchards, some in bushes, and some on the ground. But wherever they
-live, they are beautiful to look at, and bewitching to study.
-
-Though they are little, they have plenty of spirit. I know of one kept
-in a room with several other birds, all bigger than himself. You might
-think he would be treated as big boys would treat a little one. But no,
-indeed! the tiny fellow made himself ruler of the whole party. He took
-the biggest bathing-dish, the best seed-cup, and the most desirable
-perch, and drove away any big bird who dared to claim either.
-
-
-The YELLOW WARBLER, found all over the country, is often called the wild
-canary, for, as you see him fly, he appears to be entirely yellow, but
-when you get nearer, you will see that on his breast are fine stripes of
-reddish brown. His mate is all in yellow-olive color.
-
-They are very sweet little creatures, and make one of the prettiest
-nests in America. It is usually in an upright fork of a tree, or bush.
-It is made of fine material, among the rest a good deal of a gray silky
-stuff which gives it a beautiful look.
-
-This bird is one of the few who will not bring up a cowbird baby. When
-the tiny mother finds a cowbird's egg in her nest, she builds another
-story on top of the nest, leaving the egg to spoil. Sometimes a cowbird
-finds the second nest, and then the warbler adds a third story. Nests
-have been found three stories high, with a dried-up cowbird egg in each
-of the two lower stories.
-
-A strange thing happened once to a pair of yellow warblers. When the
-nest was done and the eggs laid, a storm threw it out of place, and
-tipped it over to one side, so that the little mother did not dare trust
-it for a cradle. So she built another nest in the same bush, and went to
-sitting on that.
-
-One day a bird-lover chanced to see the two nests, one with the bird
-sitting, the other tipped partly over and left with the eggs still in
-it. To see what the birds would do, he put the fallen nest back in
-place, and made it firm, and then went away. The little pair looked at
-the nest, and had a great deal of chatter over it. It was their own nest
-and their own eggs, but the mother could not sit in two places.
-
-Finally, the singer took his place on the restored nest. After that it
-was watched, and the two birds sat on the two nests till all the young
-were hatched, and then fed and reared them. When they were ready to fly,
-the happy birds had a big family to take care of.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Besides these tiny fellows that we call warblers, there are four bigger
-birds classed with the family, who do not look or act like warblers.
-They are the golden-crowned thrush or oven-bird, the water-thrush, the
-Louisiana water-thrush, and the yellow-breasted chat.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT]
-
-
-The OVEN-BIRD gets his name from the nest, which is shaped like an
-old-fashioned oven. It is on the ground in the woods, often on the side
-of a little slope. It has a roof over it covered with sticks and leaves
-like the ground around it, so that it is hard to see.
-
-If you were to see this bird walking about on the ground, as he does,
-you would think him a thrush. He is something the same color, and he has
-a speckled breast like a thrush. His mate is dressed in the same way,
-and they have a dull yellowish stripe over the crown.
-
-He is the fellow you hear in the woods, calling "Teacher! teacher!
-teacher!" He is found all over the United States east of the Rocky
-Mountains.
-
-
-The YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT is perhaps the drollest bird in North America.
-He is a beautiful bird, nearly as large as an oriole, olive green above
-and brilliant yellow below, and his mate is the same. He is found all
-over the country south of the latitude of Massachusetts. In the West and
-California, the chat is a little more gray in color, and has a longer
-tail. He is called the long-tailed chat, but a chat is the same funny
-fellow, wherever he is found.
-
-He reminds one of a clown, he plays so many antics, and makes such queer
-sounds, hardly in the least like a song. He will whistle, bark like a
-puppy, mew like a cat, or laugh like an old man, all in a loud, strange
-voice.
-
-Besides this, the chat is a ventriloquist, that is, can make his voice
-appear to come from some place far off, when he is near, and so fool us.
-The chat has a way of flying up into the air with wings fluttering and
-legs dangling as if they were not well fastened on, and looking as if he
-would fall to pieces himself. He does not like to be seen, either. He
-prefers to hide in a thick bush, and make all sorts of strange noises to
-deceive one.
-
-The one thing a chat hates more than anything else is to have his nest
-found. I have known a chat to desert a nest with three lovely eggs in
-it, just because it was looked at, though neither nest nor eggs were
-touched.
-
-I found that nest myself, and I wanted very much to see how the birds
-live and bring up the little ones, so I was careful not to disturb
-anything. I hid myself a long way off, where I could see the nest with a
-field-glass, and where I thought the birds would not notice me. I sat
-there perfectly still for hours, till the eggs had time to get cold, and
-I saw another bird carry them off. No doubt they saw me, however, for
-they never came back to the nest.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[9] See Appendix, 8.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-THE VIREO FAMILY
-
-(_Vireonidae_)[10]
-
-
-THE vireos are a small family, fifty species, found only in America.
-They are very quietly dressed in greenish olive hues, with hardly a
-bright color among them. They were once called greenlets.
-
-They all live in trees and catch insects, going about over the twigs.
-They sing as they go, like the warblers, combining work and play. Some
-of them sing almost without stopping, and it gets to be rather tiresome
-after a while. One or two of them even sing on the nest, which hardly
-another bird does.
-
-The vireos make the prettiest nests. They are swinging baskets, hung
-between the forks of a twig, and usually near the end, where they rock
-in every breeze. They are not often very high. The birds are easily
-tamed by one who is quiet, and careful not to frighten them.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-THROATED VIREO AND NEST]
-
-Mr. Torrey found a vireo on her nest, and by gentle ways got her to let
-him stroke her. Next day he took some rose leaves with aphides on them,
-and holding one of the insects on his finger, he offered it to the bird
-on the nest. She took it, and then another and another, till finally she
-began to be very eager for them, and he could hardly feed her fast
-enough. Then he took a teaspoon full of water up to her, and she drank.
-
-
-Another gentleman--Mr. Hoffmann--did still more. He coaxed a
-YELLOW-THROATED VIREO till she took food out of his lips. Black ants and
-cankerworms were the things he fed her. She preferred the ants, and
-would scold him a little at first when he offered the worms, though she
-took them at last. This bird was so tame she would let a man lift her
-off her nest and put her on his shoulder while he looked at the eggs.
-She would stay there till he put her back.
-
-The yellow-throat, besides making a pretty hanging basket, covers the
-outside with lichens of different colors, green, dark and light, yellow,
-and almost black. It is said that these pretty things are put on by the
-male while his mate is sitting.
-
-A pair was once watched at their building. The female was lining and
-shaping the inside, and her mate working silky-looking strips from
-plants into the framework, and then covering the whole with lichens. He
-was so happy, he sang as he worked.
-
-
-The one of this family most widely spread over the country, from the
-Atlantic to the Pacific, is the WARBLING VIREO. His song is the most
-agreeable of the vireo songs, being truly a warble of six or eight
-notes, of which one does not get tired. The dress of the Western
-warbling vireo is a little paler, but the habits and manners are about
-the same as those of his Eastern brother.
-
-Vireos were once common in the shade-trees of our city streets, and are
-still in some places where English sparrows have not taken everything,
-and boys are not allowed to throw stones or shoot. I know one city in
-Massachusetts where trees are very lovely and musical with
-yellow-throats.
-
-We can still have these and other birds in our yards--we who do not live
-in the middle of a big city--by protecting them from cats and bad boys,
-and furnishing good places to nest. Mr. Lloyd Morgan tells of a garden
-near his own where there were fifty-three nests, besides swallows'. The
-owner planted thick bushes, and some cone-bearing trees. He put
-bird-boxes and old flower-pots and other things suitable to build in, in
-convenient places in the trees. The birds appreciated all this and came
-and stayed with him.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[10] See Appendix, 9.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-THE SHRIKE FAMILY
-
-(_Laniidae_)[11]
-
-
-A SHRIKE is a pretty gray bird with white and black trimmings. He is
-nearly as large as a robin, and has a bill slightly hooked on the end.
-This is to help catch living prey, for he eats mice and other little
-mammals, besides grasshoppers, crickets, and sometimes small birds.
-
-This family have a curious habit of sticking dead grasshoppers, or mice,
-or other food, on a thorn, to keep till they are wanted. Because of this
-habit they have been called butcher-birds.
-
-
-The LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE, who is perhaps the most widely known, builds a
-bulky nest in a tree, and is very attentive to his mate while she is
-sitting. She looks exactly like him.
-
-He is a very quiet bird, and three or four or more of them may often be
-seen in a little party together, flying and hopping about in a tree, or
-on the ground, in the most amiable way. This shrike is a sweet singer,
-too. The song is not loud, but very pleasing.
-
-[Illustration: LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE]
-
-A great deal that is not true has been said about this bird. Some people
-seem to think he is in the habit of tormenting and killing little birds
-for fun, and he is called many hard names. But he does not deserve them.
-His way of keeping his food has been spoken of as if it were a crime. He
-lives generally on crickets, grasshoppers, meadow mice, and small
-snakes, besides cut-worms, cankerworms, and many others. He is extremely
-useful to farmers and cultivators on that account.
-
-Sometimes, when other food is scarce, he eats small birds, but they are
-by no means his usual food. I have watched a family of shrikes several
-times, and always looked very sharply to see if they touched birds. I
-have seen them eat many sorts of insects and grubs, and meadow mice, but
-never saw one disturb a bird. Other people who have watched them closely
-have told that their experience was the same. And writers about birds
-who study for themselves, and do not merely repeat what others have
-said, generally agree that the bird kills his prey before he impales it.
-More than that, the number of birds he kills is very small compared to
-the hosts of troublesome insects and small animals he eats.
-
-The conclusion of the Agricultural Department as to the food of shrikes
-all over the country is that it consists mainly of grasshoppers, and
-that the good they do is much greater than the harm, and therefore they
-should be protected.
-
-Mr. Keyser once saw a shrike catch a meadow mouse, and carry it up into
-a tree. First he killed it, and then tried to wedge it into a crotch so
-that he could eat it. But finally he found the sharp end of a broken
-snag, on which he fastened it.
-
-There is no doubt that the shrike impales his prey so that he can pull
-it to pieces to eat, for his feet are too small to hold it. I have seen
-a shrike throw a dead meadow mouse over a fence wire that had sagged to
-the ground, in order to get bits off to eat.
-
-A lady in New Hampshire who had a captive shrike tells in "Bird-Lore"
-that he was unable to eat a piece of meat until he could find a place to
-fasten it. He hopped around the room, looking for something, till she
-guessed what he wanted. Then she brought a kitchen fork with two tines.
-The moment he saw it he ran to her, hopped up on her hand, jerked his
-meat over the tines, and at once began to eat.
-
-An interesting little action of one of these birds was seen by a
-gentleman traveling in Florida last winter. Wishing to have one of the
-birds to add to a collection, he shot one (I'm sorry to say). The bird
-was not killed, but wounded so that he could not fly. As the man came
-near to pick it up, the poor fellow gave a cry of distress, and
-fluttered away on his broken wing with great difficulty.
-
-His call for help was heard. Another shrike at once flew down from a
-tree, and went to his aid. He flew close around him and under him, in
-some way holding him up as he was about to fall. He helped him so well
-that the two began to rise in the air, and before the eyes of the
-surprised hunter, at last got safely into the top of a tall tree, where
-he left them.
-
-If you ever happen to find a shrike nesting, I hope you will watch the
-birds for yourself, and see how they act, and not take the word of any
-one about them. Then you will really know them. The picture shows a
-shrike as I have often seen one, sitting on the top twig of the tree
-that holds his nest, watching to see that no harm comes to it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[11] See Appendix, 10.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-THE WAXWING FAMILY
-
-(_Ampelidae_)[12]
-
-
-THE waxwings are a family of beautiful birds, with elegant pointed
-crests, and wonderfully silky plumage. Excepting one species they are in
-soft grayish or reddish brown colors, with yellow tips to their tails
-and black lines on the head that look like spectacles, and give them a
-wise appearance.
-
-
-Best known is the CEDAR WAXWING, or CEDAR-BIRD. He is a citizen at
-large, you may say, for he is known from sea to sea, and from Canada to
-Mexico. He nests all over the northern parts, and winters in the
-southern parts.
-
-This bird gets his name of cedar-bird from the fact that he is fond of
-cedar berries. He is often called cherry-bird also, because he likes
-cherries. His name waxwing comes from the little tips like red
-sealing-wax which are on some of his wing feathers. In Maine he is
-called the bonnet-bird because of his crest, and in some places he is
-called silk-tail from his silky plumage. You see he has plenty of names.
-
-Among the strange things about him is that he has almost no voice. The
-loudest sound he is known to make is a sort of whistle, so low it is
-like a whisper.
-
-The cedar-bird builds a very neat nest in a tree, and feeds his mate
-while she is sitting, as well as helps her feed the little folk. The
-young cedar-bird is a winsome youngster, gentle in his ways, and pretty
-in his soft gray suit and spotted breast.
-
-One day last summer, a man walking down a quiet road was surprised by a
-young bird alighting on his shoulder. He walked on home with it, and
-when he took it off found it was a baby cedar-bird. No doubt he had
-tried to fly too far and got tired.
-
-The family kept the bird a day or two, and then brought him to me. He
-was not afraid of anybody, and was perfectly happy so long as some one
-would keep him warm between two hands.
-
-It was hard to get him to eat, and there were plenty of his grown-up
-relatives about, probably his own family among them. So I thought it
-would be safe to put him out. I took him to the woods where I had seen a
-little family of young cedar-birds, and placed him on a low tree. He
-brightened up at once, and began to call, and flew to another tree.
-Fearing that my being there might prevent his mother coming to him, I
-left him. When I went out again I could not find him, so I hope he was
-safe with his friends.
-
-I was more certain of it, because I know that these birds are kind to
-all birds in distress. A lady was once watching a nest of robins when
-the parents disappeared, no doubt killed. She was much troubled to know
-how she should get at the high nest to feed the young ones who were
-calling for their dinner, when she saw a cedar-bird go to them and feed
-them.
-
-After that she kept close watch, and saw the cedar-bird feed them every
-day, and take care of the nestlings till they could fly. He no doubt
-taught them to take care of themselves, but this she could not see, for
-they flew away.
-
-The ordinary food of this bird is insects that are found on trees,
-especially among fruit. But they have taken to fly-catching also. A
-party of them may often be seen busily at work catching flies. This is a
-very good thing for them as well as for us. The birds or beasts who can
-eat only one sort of food are called "single-food" animals, and they
-are growing scarcer every day. They need a change of diet to flourish.
-We should be sorry to have cedar-birds become scarce.
-
-Cedar-birds are fond of cherries,--as I said,--but they eat hundreds of
-cankerworms to one cherry. So they earn all they have. Besides, if they
-can get wild cherries, they prefer them. They have been proved to be
-among our most useful birds. In one hundred and fifty-two stomachs that
-were examined, only nine had cultivated cherries.
-
-Cedar-birds eat caterpillars and grubs, and are very fond of the
-elm-leaf beetle. They have been known to clear the elm-trees of a whole
-town, where the trees had been stripped for several years before they
-came. Besides insects, they eat the berries of many wild bushes and
-trees, such as wild cherry, dogwood, June-berry, elder, and others. They
-always prefer wild to cultivated berries.
-
-One spring I saw a little flock of cedar-birds in an orchard full of
-blossoming apple-trees. They spent nearly all their time going over the
-trees, and working among the blossoms. One who was careless about it
-might have thought they were destroying apple buds, for they did eat
-many of the white petals of the flowers. But I wanted to be sure, so I
-watched carefully with my glass. Then I stayed by that orchard till
-October, and I never saw trees so loaded with apples as they were. Many
-branches lay on the ground with their weight of fruit, and in the whole
-orchard there was but one insect nest. That showed not only that the
-cedar-birds had done no harm, but that probably they had destroyed
-thousands of insects that would have done harm.
-
-
-A bird classed with the waxwings is a California bird, the PHAINOPEPLA,
-or SHINING CRESTED FLYCATCHER. He is glossy bluish black in color, with
-large white spots in the wings, which show only when flying. His mate is
-brownish gray. They are rather slim birds, nearly as big as a catbird.
-
-The phainopepla is a beautiful fellow, with an elegant pointed crest,
-and plumage shining like satin. He sits up very straight on his perch,
-but he is a rather shy bird, and so not much is known about his ways. He
-is a real mountain lover, living on mountains, or in canyons, or the
-borders of small streams of California, Arizona, and Texas.
-
-As you see by one of his names, he is a flycatcher. Sometimes thirty or
-forty of them may be seen in a flock, all engaged in catching flies.
-But like the cedar-bird, he is also fond of berries. When berries are
-ripe on the pepper-trees, he comes nearer to houses to feast on the
-beautiful red clusters.
-
-The song of this bird is said to be fine, and like many other birds, he
-sometimes utters a sweet whisper song.
-
-The nest is placed on a branch, not very high up in a tree, and is
-often, perhaps always, made of flower stems with the flowers on, with
-fine strips of bark, grasses, and plant down.
-
-What is curious, and rare among birds, the male phainopepla insists on
-making the nest himself. He generally allows his mate to come and look
-on, and greets her with joyous song, but he will not let her touch it
-till all is done. Sometimes he even drives her away. When all is ready
-for sitting, he lets her take her share of the work, but even then he
-appears to sit as much as she. Miss Merriam found a party of these birds
-on some pepper-trees, and to her we owe most of what we know of their
-habits.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[12] See Appendix, 11.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-THE SWALLOW FAMILY
-
-(_Hirundinidae_)[13]
-
-
-IT is very easy to know this family. They are small birds with long
-pointed wings, always sailing around in the air as if they could never
-tire. Their beaks are short, but very wide at the head, and the mouth
-opens as far back as the eyes. They have small and weak feet, so when
-they alight, it is usually on a small twig or telegraph wire, or on the
-flat top of a fence or roof.
-
-Swallows wear no gay colors. Nearly all of them look black and white as
-they sail about in the air. But when you see them closely, you see they
-are glossy dark blue or green, sometimes with changeable colors, but all
-dark, on the back.
-
-
-The BARN SWALLOW has a dull reddish breast, and his back is rich blue,
-almost black. He has a deeply forked tail, and a row of white spots on
-the shorter tail feathers. When he spreads his tail, it is very
-beautiful.
-
-He is called barn swallow because he prefers a barn for a nesting-place.
-Up on the beams, close under the roof, the pair build their mud cradle.
-It is interesting to see them at work. When they have chosen a place,
-they go to some puddle in the road. They stand around it on their tiny
-feet, holding their wings straight up like a butterfly's. Then they take
-up some of the wet earth in their beaks, and work it around till it is
-made into a little pill. With this pill they fly to the place they have
-selected, and stick it on to the beam. Then they go back for more. So
-they go on, till they have built up the walls of the nest, an inch
-thick, and three or four inches high. Sometimes they put layers of fine
-grass in, but often they use nothing but mud. Then they line it with
-feathers which they pick up in the chicken yard.
-
-Some swallows build a platform beside the nest, where one of the pair
-can rest at night; and when the little ones get big enough to fill up
-the nest, both parents can sleep there.
-
-When the swallows are flying about low over the grass, looking as if
-they were at play, they are really catching tiny insects as they go. And
-when they have nestlings to feed, they collect a mouthful which they
-make up into a sort of little ball. Then they fly to the nest and feed
-it to one of the little ones.
-
-Thus they keep the air clear and free from insects, and they do not a
-bit of harm, for they never touch our fruit or vegetables.
-
-Barn swallows are social, and always go in flocks. They sing, too,--a
-sweet little song, but not very loud. It is charming to hear them in a
-barn when five or six of them sing together. But one may often hear the
-little song from a single bird flying over.
-
-They are friendly among themselves, and they like to alight on a roof
-and chatter away a long time. In one place where I was staying, they
-liked to gather on a piazza roof right under my window. They often woke
-me in the morning with their sweet little voices.
-
-One morning the sound was so near, it seemed as if they must be in the
-room, and I opened my eyes to see. There on the sill close to the screen
-was one of the pretty fellows. He was looking in at the open window, and
-evidently keeping watch of me. When I moved a little, he gave the alarm,
-and the whole party flew away.
-
-The chatter of barn swallows always seems to me like talk, and men who
-study bird ways agree that birds have some sort of language. The
-swallows have many different notes. One is a general warning of danger,
-but there is another note for a man, another for a cat, and a still
-different one when they find something good to eat, which they call the
-others to share.
-
-"The variety of bird speech," says a man who has studied birds a long
-time, "is very great." And of all bird voices, swallows' are the most
-like human speech. If you lie on the hay in the barn very quiet, and
-listen to them when they come in and fly about, you will see that this
-is true. It seems sometimes as if you could almost make out words.
-
-
-Swallows more than any other birds like to make use of our buildings for
-their own homes. Barn swallows take the beams inside the barns, EAVE
-SWALLOWS settle under the eaves outside, and PURPLE MARTINS, the largest
-of the family, choose bird-houses which we put up for them.
-
-It is said that purple martins will not stay anywhere that men have not
-made houses for them. But I have seen them living in a place not put up
-for them, though perhaps they thought it was. It was under a terra-cotta
-covering to a cornice on a business block in the middle of a busy city.
-The terra-cotta was shaped like a large pipe cut in half, the long way.
-This half cylinder was laid on top of the brick cornice, and that made a
-little roof, you see. The whole length of that cornice was thus made
-into one long room, with a brick floor and terra-cotta roof, and an
-entrance at the end. That room must have had a dozen martin nests, for a
-flock was all the time sailing about in the air, above the roofs of the
-houses.
-
-As these birds eat only flying insects, they cannot stay with us when it
-is too cool for insects to fly abroad. So they leave us very early. When
-the little ones are out of the nest and can fly well, swallows from all
-the country around collect in great flocks, and go to some swamp, or
-lonely place where people do not go much. There the young ones are
-taught and exercised every day in flying. And some day we shall go out
-and find them all gone, not a swallow to be seen. They have started for
-their winter home, which is far south, in tropical countries, where
-insects never fail; but it is a comfort to think that next summer we
-shall have them back with us again.
-
-The swallows I have mentioned, barn swallow, eave swallow, and purple
-martin, are found all over our country.
-
-Let me tell you a story that shows the purple martin has a good deal of
-sense. One of these birds built in a box under a window, fixed so that
-the owner could open it and take out eggs. He took out several, one at a
-time, and at last he took out one of the birds.
-
-The mate of the stolen bird went off and in a few days came back with
-another mate. The box was too good to give up, so both the birds went to
-work to make it safe against the nest robber. They built up a wall of
-mud before the too handy back door. The egg thief could not get in
-without breaking down the wall, and he was ashamed to do that. So the
-birds kept their pleasant home, and reared their family there.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[13] See Appendix, 12.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-THE TANAGER FAMILY
-
-(_Tanagridae_)[14]
-
-
-THIS is a large family of between three and four hundred species, all
-dressed in gay colors. But we have only three of them in our country.
-Their home is in the warmer parts of the world. We have the scarlet
-tanager in the East, the Louisiana tanager in the West, and the summer
-tanager in the South. Tanagers are a little larger than sparrows, and
-live in the trees. They feed on insects and fruit; sometimes, it is
-said, on flowers.
-
-
-The SCARLET TANAGER is the brilliant red bird with black wings and tail,
-common all over the Eastern and Middle States. His mate is dressed in
-modest olive green, and the nestlings are like her the first year.
-
-The tanager himself wears his gay dress only during the nesting season,
-that is, spring and summer. Towards fall he turns from scarlet to green
-like his mate, and he is a droll-looking object while he does it. He
-seems to break out into green patches or streaks. One that I watched
-began by showing a little green feather among the red on each side of
-his breast. I have seen one with a green ring around the neck, and all
-the rest of the plumage scarlet; and another with a green stripe down
-the back. Some show no regularity about it, but are covered with green
-patches all over, and look like bunches of colored rags.
-
-[Illustration: SCARLET TANAGER]
-
-It is no wonder that a bird hides in the woods, as many do, when
-changing his coat, if he looks such an object. In spring he gets back
-his brilliant coat, and comes to our Northern woods again, to nest.
-
-The nest of this bird is not very high in a tree. It is a rather shabby
-affair, that looks as if it would fall to pieces, and the birds are
-madly shy about being looked at.
-
-I once saw in the woods a tanager building her nest. I hoped to watch
-her through nesting, and see how she brought up her little folk. Both of
-the pair were there, but were too shy to come to the nest while my
-friend and I were there. We kept very still, and even hid in some
-bushes, hoping she would not see us. We were so quiet that she was
-gradually getting over her fright, and coming nearer the nest, when
-suddenly the big dog we had with us gave a loud sneeze. In an instant
-both birds were off, as if shot out of a gun. And I think they never
-came back, for the nest was not finished.
-
-The song of the tanager is much like the robin song, but having once
-learned it, a sharp ear can easily tell them apart, for it is of a
-different tone. It is rather hoarse, not so smooth as a robin's voice.
-The common call is a hoarse and very distinct "chip, chur," given by
-both of the pair.
-
-Several years ago I saw a scarlet tanager in a bird store. It was
-winter, and I brought him home to keep till it was safe to set him free
-in the spring. He was very timid, and did not like to have any one look
-at him, especially when he went to eat.
-
-If I happened to look at him when he was at his food-dish, he would
-instantly fly to his top perch, and look as if he would never eat again.
-So I partitioned off one corner of his cage for a private dining-room,
-by a strip of stiff paper woven between the wires. After that it was
-very droll to see him retire behind the screen and eat, now and then
-sticking up his head to glance over the top, and see if I were looking.
-
-I found it hard to please him with food. He liked living insects, but he
-wanted to catch them for himself. So I got some sticky fly-paper, and
-hung it up outside the kitchen door. When I had caught half a dozen
-flies, I took it up to him. He was not in a cage, and the minute he saw
-the flies he flew across the room and hovered before me like a big
-hummingbird, while he daintily picked off every fly. He forgot that he
-didn't like to have me see him eat. After that I was fly-catcher every
-day till he learned to like mockingbird food.
-
-In the spring he began to sing--a sweet, low song, different from the
-common tanager song. Then I took him out to the country, away from the
-English sparrows, and set him free.
-
-
-The SUMMER TANAGER nests in the Southern States from New Jersey to
-Florida. He is all red, but otherwise looks like the scarlet tanager,
-and his habits are about the same.
-
-
-The LOUISIANA TANAGER nests in the Western States from the Plains to the
-Pacific. He is brighter, with a variety of colors. He is mostly bright
-yellow, with brilliant red head, and black wings and tail, and his
-mate--like other female tanagers--is in olive green. He is a shy bird,
-and lives in the woods, and his habits have been very little studied.
-
-I once saw a pair of these birds in Utah, getting their breakfast. At
-least, the gay singer himself was at that business, though his
-sharp-eyed mate was too busy watching me to see that I did not mean any
-harm, to care for food.
-
-They were on a long fence, catching flies. One would fly out a little
-way, his bill snapping as he seized the fly, and then return to the
-fence a little farther off. Every time he came back he alighted farther
-away, though he did not seem even to see me. His mate kept between him
-and me, and never took her eyes from me. I feared she would go hungry,
-so I came away and left them.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[14] See Appendix, 13.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-THE SPARROW AND FINCH FAMILY
-
-(_Fringillidae_)[15]
-
-
-THIS is the largest bird family, more than five hundred species, and
-they are found nearly all over the world. It is divided into sparrows,
-finches, grosbeaks, and crossbills. All of them are smaller than a
-robin, and have short, high beaks, with the back corners turned down.
-The beaks show that they are seed eaters, though all of them eat insects
-too.
-
-An interesting thing about birds who eat seeds is the grinding machine
-they have inside to break up the hard seeds. For of course, having no
-teeth, they are obliged to swallow them nearly whole. What I have called
-a machine is the gizzard, and you have seen it on the table from a
-chicken. It is well fitted to grind up the food, and birds often swallow
-small stones to help in the work.
-
-The first group of this family, the sparrows, are all small, about the
-size of an English sparrow. They are dressed in dull, brownish colors,
-more or less streaked, and they live and get their food very largely on
-or near the ground. Their colors keep them from being easily seen on the
-ground.
-
-All of this group sing, and some of them are noted songsters, as the
-song sparrow, the white-throated sparrow, and the fox sparrow. The best
-known is the little song sparrow, who is found almost everywhere, and is
-dear to nearly every one.
-
-
-The SONG SPARROW is streaked all over in shades of brown. The breast is
-white, with the dark brown streaks coming together in an
-irregular-shaped spot, or sometimes two spots, in front.
-
-The nest of the song sparrow is on the ground or very near it. Sometimes
-it is in a tuft of grass, sometimes in a low bush a few inches up. One I
-found at the roots of a little clump of golden-rod, before it bloomed,
-of course. It was a slight affair, right among the stems, so that it
-could not be taken up without tearing the plant.
-
-This bird is one of the first to come in the spring, and his song and
-the robin's are the first we hear. He also stays very late in the fall,
-and about New York some of them stay all winter. Their food being the
-seeds of weeds, which are always to be found, they do not need to
-migrate.
-
-The song sparrow has a sweet and cheery voice, and a variety of songs,
-and he sings a great deal. I have heard one bird sing six different
-songs, standing on a fence in plain sight all the time. Some of the
-songs are charming, and all are pleasant to hear. One never tires of
-song-sparrow music.
-
-
-The second branch of this family--the Finches--have some brighter
-colored members, the goldfinch in brilliant lemon-yellow, and the purple
-finch in crimson and white.
-
-The GOLDFINCH, called also the thistle-bird, lettuce-bird, and wild
-canary, is a charming fellow, dressed, as I said, in lemon color, with
-black wings and tail and cap. His mate is in olive brown. He is the most
-delightful of singers, with a sweet voice, and is a common bird all over
-the country. He flies in great waves, uttering a cheery little warble as
-he goes over each airy wave.
-
-The nest is one of the prettiest we have, in an upright crotch, and
-furnished with a bed of thistledown an inch thick for the baby
-goldfinches to rest upon. It is made late in the season, in July and
-sometimes in August.
-
-One of the most lovely bird-studies I ever had was of a pair of these
-birds nesting in a low plum-tree. While his mate was sitting, the gay
-little fellow hung around, doing nothing but watching the tree that held
-his family. Every little while the sitting bird would begin to call her
-sweet-voiced "s-w-e-e-t," which sounds so much like a canary's call. On
-hearing this he would answer her, and at once fly over to see if she was
-all right, or wanted anything. When he thought it time to eat, he would
-come and call her off. Both would then go to a patch of weeds, where
-they cracked and ate the seeds till they had had enough, and then go
-back to the nursery.
-
-These little birds eat mostly the seeds of weeds,--thistle, ragweed, and
-beggar's-ticks,--as well as the larvae of the wheat-midge and other
-pests, and they feed great quantities to their young.
-
-Goldfinches do not leave us in winter. The male puts off his bright coat
-and comes out in dull colors like his mate, except that he keeps his
-black wings and tail. All of a neighborhood collect in small flocks and
-stay about all winter, looking more like sparrows than goldfinches.
-
-The Western goldfinch which corresponds to this bird is called in
-California the WILLOW GOLDFINCH, but in looks and in habits of life he
-seems to be the same as the Eastern bird. He is a confiding little
-creature, and by a person of quiet ways may be made very tame.
-
-
-Among the finches will be found the CHEWINK, or TOWHEE BUNTING, a bird
-nearly of the size of a catbird, who is sometimes called ground robin.
-He is black and white, with reddish sides and red eyes, and his mate is
-brown where he is black. He is usually found on the ground, where he
-gets his food, and where the nest is placed.
-
-There are several species in California, and the Western variety of the
-common chewink of the East is called the spurred towhee, with habits the
-same, so far as known.
-
-The chewink has at the best an exquisite song, though there is a great
-difference in singers, as there is in all bird families. The finest song
-is like a peal of silver-toned bells.
-
-A bird-lover whom I know found one day a nestling chewink who could not
-fly much, and seemed to be deserted, or lost, in a barren place on Long
-Island. Fearing that some cat would get him, he brought the bird home
-and put him in a cage. The little fellow was not at all frightened at
-his new surroundings, and became very tame.
-
-The cage of the young bird was near that of an ortolan, a European bird
-noted as a singer, and a common cage-bird. The baby chewink seemed to
-take a great liking to the stranger, and tried to do everything he did.
-Perhaps he felt the need of some education, since he had been deprived
-of his parents. At any rate, he evidently adopted the ortolan as his
-model.
-
-When the little one began to sing, he did not sing chewink but ortolan,
-and he did it so well that one could hardly tell which bird was singing.
-The gentleman wanted to see if the little fellow would recognize the
-song of his own family. So he bought a full-grown chewink who was
-singing, and put him close to his young relative. The new bird was full
-of music, and sang a great deal. But the youngster paid no attention to
-him, and kept up his ortolan notes.
-
-This story shows that a bird does not always, if ever, know his native
-song by instinct, but has to learn it. It is supposed by those who have
-studied bird ways that he learns it from the old bird before he leaves
-the nest.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[15] See Appendix, 14.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-THE GROSBEAK BRANCH
-
-(_Fringillidae_)--Continued
-
-
-THE third division of this family is of grosbeaks. These are the largest
-of the group, and nearly the size of a robin, with very big beaks. They
-live in trees and wear some bright colors. They are also fine singers.
-
-
-In the Eastern States, and west to Missouri, is found the ROSE-BREASTED
-GROSBEAK. He is a beautiful bird, black and white, with a gorgeous
-rose-colored patch on his white breast, and the same color on the inside
-of his wings. You can see him in the picture. His mate is modest in
-stripes of brown and buffy white.
-
-[Illustration: ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK]
-
-A lady whom I know in New England has had three of these birds living
-tame in her house, hardly at all confined to a cage. Each one was picked
-up when just out of the nest and so injured that it could not care for
-itself. It was carefully fed and reared in the house, and thus saved
-from death.
-
-One of the three was a female, who was as tame as a domestic cat, and
-lived in the house four or five years. She was a fine singer, though
-never a loud one. She kept the family cats in their place by pecking at
-their toes when they came near, so they had respect for her.
-
-Another was a young singer who had his bill crossed, so that he could
-not feed himself. He was nearly dead for want of food when he was found.
-She fed him carefully and brought him up, though she had always to feed
-him herself. That is a good deal to do, for birds want to be fed very
-often.
-
-These birds who lived in a house, and were not taught by their parents,
-never gave the common song of the species, but made up songs of their
-own. They lived several years with their friend, who was very fond of
-them.
-
-The rose-breasted grosbeak is one who puts on his gay colors only for
-the nesting season. When that is over, and he moults, and gets his new
-winter suit, it is mostly streaked brown like his mate's. The rosy patch
-is very small, and mixed with brown, so the effect is dull. In the
-spring he moults the body feathers, and comes out again with his
-brilliant rose colors.
-
-
-The bird who takes the place of the rosebreast in the West is the
-BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK. He is reddish brown and black, with the same
-color and lemon yellow on the under parts, and yellow under the wings,
-instead of rose like the Eastern bird. He is a loud, enthusiastic
-singer. Miss Merriam says of him that his song to his mate is finer than
-that of any other bird she has heard.
-
-
-The CARDINAL GROSBEAK, cardinal redbird, Virginia nightingale, or
-redbird, as he is called in different places, is of the third group of
-this family. He is found all over the Southern States, and as far north
-as Southern New England and New York. He is a brilliant red to the tip
-of his beak, with a beautiful crest and black throat and face. His mate
-is in soft dove colors, with red beak, and reddish tints on her quiet
-robe.
-
-Both of the pair are singers. He is much the louder, but she has the
-sweeter song. He is famous as a singer, and is therefore trapped and
-caught in great numbers for cages. In Europe, where he is a favorite
-cage-bird, he is thought by many to be equal to the famous nightingale
-as a singer.
-
-In Ohio, a few years ago, a law was made that no cardinal should be
-caged, and those in cages should be set free. In one small village were
-more than forty freed. This shows how many are caged.
-
-While nesting, the cardinal is rather savage, ready to fight any one who
-disturbs the nest. If a snake comes about, all the birds within hearing,
-from cardinals to kinglets, will come to help defend the nest and punish
-the enemy. They fly at him with loud cries, and even attack him if he
-does not leave.
-
-The nest of these birds is not very high, in a tree or bush, and they
-are very shy about it. A cardinal will desert her nest if it is touched,
-especially if eggs are not yet laid. But they have reason to be afraid;
-they cannot be blamed for that.
-
-I saw a nest built on a trellis beside a kitchen door, and the birds
-were so used to the people that they were not afraid. One who lived in
-that house was a boy fourteen years old. But he was so gentle with birds
-that they did not fear him at all. They would feed the nestlings freely,
-while he stood not three feet from them. So they can be made tame, if
-people will be gentle and not disturb them.
-
-The cardinal grosbeak stays as far north as New Jersey and Ohio all
-winter, and a little flock have lived in Central Park, New York, for
-several years. That is most delightful for those who live near, for
-they sing all winter, when few bird-notes are to be heard. They can stay
-because they are seed eaters, and they find many weed seeds, and wild
-berries like cedar berries, that stay on all winter.
-
-[Illustration: CARDINAL]
-
-A lady once had a cardinal in a cage with a pair of the tiny green
-parrots called love-birds. These little birds, you know, are always
-putting the bills together and caressing each other, as if kissing. The
-cardinal seemed to think this very silly; at any rate, he did not like
-it. After looking on awhile, he would lose patience and dash right down
-between them. Of course this drove them apart. Then he seemed to feel
-better, and went back to his perch. But when they began it again, down
-he would come between them again. He did not disturb them at any other
-time, but that sort of thing he plainly couldn't endure.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-THE CROSSBILL BRANCH
-
-(_Fringillidae_)--Continued
-
-
-THE fourth branch of this family is of crossbills. Of these we have two.
-They are smaller than grosbeaks, and, as their name shows, have the two
-points of the bill crossed. It looks as if they could not feed
-themselves. But a beak like this is just fitted to pick seeds out of
-cones. And crossbills live mostly on cone-seeds.
-
-These queer beaks are used for another thing, too. They help the birds
-climb around on the trees. They are almost as good as a hand. You have
-seen a parrot use his beak in the same way.
-
-
-The AMERICAN, or RED, CROSSBILL is the more common of our two. He
-travels about all over the Northern States and California. But he's very
-particular about a place to nest, and is suited only in the northern
-parts, or in the mountains.
-
-The red crossbill seems to be a whimsical fellow; one never knows where
-to find him. One year he will come with all his friends to a place, and
-the next year there will not be one there.
-
-The male is dull red, more or less streaked all over with brown. His
-mate is olive green, mottled and mixed with blackish.
-
-Crossbills go in flocks. They are usually seen among the evergreens,
-where they find their food. They are much attached to one another.
-
-I had a chance one summer to get well acquainted with a flock of
-American crossbills. I found them very odd in their manners. They had
-the queerest songs and calls of any bird I know. These were not musical,
-but sounded like such things as the squeaking of a wagon wheel or the
-sawing of wood.
-
-The birds were very fond of calling and singing, and they kept up a
-constant chattering, as they flew from spruce to spruce. They spent most
-of their time on these trees, eating the seeds of the cones.
-
-The white-winged crossbill lives about as the red one does. But he has a
-really fine song. It is full of trills, something like a canary's song.
-
-One of the odd things about these birds is their habit of nesting in
-winter. A Maine hunter was once shooting moose in the middle of January,
-when he came upon the nest of a crossbill, with the bird sitting. The
-weather was cold, of course, and there was deep snow on the ground. The
-nest was in the woods, and made of twigs, with long gray moss outside.
-It looked so like a bunch of moss that it was hard to see. Other nests
-have been found in winter also.
-
-Mr. Nehrling says that if one of these birds is caught, the rest of the
-flock will not leave him. They stay around him, crying and showing their
-distress in every way, and if one is put alone into a cage, he will
-die.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-THE BLACKBIRD FAMILY
-
-(_Icteridae_)[16]
-
-
-THERE are more than one hundred species of the Blackbird Family in
-America. So we will divide them into four branches: Marsh Blackbirds,
-Meadow Starlings, Orioles, and Crow Blackbirds.
-
-[Illustration: RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD]
-
-Blackbirds are walkers. They dress mostly in black, and they are of
-medium size. Some of them will generally be found on the ground in a
-marsh or a meadow. They are social birds, that is, they go in flocks.
-Fond as they are of society, however, there is one time when they are
-willing to be a little apart from the blackbird world. That is when they
-are nesting and rearing a young family. Two interesting birds of this
-family are the red-winged blackbird and the cow-blackbird or cowbird.
-
-
-The RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD is found all over the country. He is not so
-large as a robin, and is black all over, excepting one place on the
-wings. On these are bright stripes of red and orange, which seem to be
-on the shoulders when the wings are closed. They make the bird very gay,
-when he spreads them out in flying.
-
-The red-wing's mate is a modest-looking bird in stripes of brown and
-black. She is a plodding sort of a creature, too. She walks about on the
-ground, looking for grubs or insects so busily that she hardly seems to
-see anything else.
-
-The nest is usually in a marsh. At any rate, it must be near the water,
-for red-wings are as fond of the water as any old sailor. It is hung
-between reeds, or in the branches of a low bush. It is a comfortable,
-bag-like affair, deep enough and big enough to hold the restless
-blackbird babies.
-
-While the mother red-wing is sitting, her mate stays near her and sings
-a great deal. His song is a loud, sweet "hwa-ker-ee," which may be heard
-a long way off. When nestlings are out, he is one of the most busy and
-fussy of birds. He helps in the feeding, and seems to be a good and
-careful father. But when the young ones are grown up and able to feed
-themselves, a curious thing happens. All the gay red-wings in a
-neighborhood come together in a flock again. And all the young ones and
-the mothers stay in another flock.
-
-The red-wing is a very nervous and uneasy fellow. While his mate is
-sitting he is always on guard to see that no harm comes to her. In the
-picture you can see he looks much concerned, as if he had discovered
-something. Then he makes a great row if any one comes near. He will give
-such cries of distress that one would think he was hurt, or that his
-nestlings were being stolen away. If the enemy is a crow, come to feed
-quietly on the meadow, he will fly at him, try to peck his head, and
-annoy him till he goes away. If it is a person who alarms him, he will
-circle about over his head with loud cries, and now and then swoop down
-as if he meant to attack him. In fact, he shows so much distress that it
-is not very pleasant to stay near him.
-
-The young red-wing is just as uneasy and fussy as his papa. As soon as
-he is able to get out of the nest, he scrambles about in the bushes. He
-never stays two minutes in one place, and every time his mother comes
-with food she has to hunt him up before she can give it to him.
-
-The red-wing is fond of green corn, and is often shot by farmers, but he
-is also a famous insect eater, and earns all the corn he gets. He eats
-numbers of cut-worms, and other insects, and in some of the prairie
-States he does great good by eating locusts and their eggs. Besides
-these, he likes variety, and is fond of the seeds of weeds. Ragweed and
-smartweed seeds are dainties to him as some nuts are to you, and he eats
-a great many. So unless a large flock comes to one place to disturb the
-crops, you may be sure they do more good than harm. So says the
-Department I told you about.
-
-The young red-winged blackbird is a droll fellow, and has decided
-notions of his own. Mr. Keyser tells a story of one he picked up. He was
-put in with some other young birds,--meadowlarks and catbirds. They were
-all babies together, and all used to being fed. So when the little
-red-wing got something to eat, they would open their mouths and beg for
-it, in the pretty bird-baby way. At first he fed them, though he wasn't
-much more than a baby himself; but they liked it so well that they
-coaxed everything away from him. He soon got tired of that, and at last
-refused to feed them at all.
-
-This little bird liked to play jokes on the sober young meadowlarks. His
-way was to seize one by the wing or tail and dance around the floor,
-dragging his victim after him. The young larks scolded and held back,
-and at last they learned to stop his pranks. They did it by throwing
-themselves over on their backs, and holding up their claws ready to
-fight.
-
-In spite of this naughty fun, the young blackbird was really fond of
-them. The larks slept on the ground, and at night, when the little
-fellows settled down on the floor, the red-wing would often leave his
-perch and cuddle down by them. This must have been for company only, for
-it was his way to sleep on a perch.
-
-
-The COW-BLACKBIRD, or COWBIRD, is another one of this branch of the
-Blackbird Family who is found all over the United States. He is shining
-blue-black all over, except his head, which is brown. His mate is
-entirely brown. He is not quite so large as a red-wing, and he too is a
-walker.
-
-This bird is called cowbird because he is fond of flying about the
-cows,--not to trouble them, but to eat the insects that torment
-them,--which is very pleasant for the cows, I am sure.
-
-There is one queer way that cowbirds have, which no one is able to
-explain. The cowbird mother does not build a nest for her little family.
-Yet she wants them well cared for. So she goes slyly about and lays her
-eggs in other birds' nests. She generally chooses the nest of a smaller
-bird, though she often uses one belonging to a wood thrush.
-
-Most little birds--warblers and finches--accept the charge. They hatch
-out the strange egg and bring up the young cowbird, who is bigger than
-themselves. He is so big that he usually smothers the young ones that
-belong in the nest. So he receives the whole attention of the little
-mother bird.
-
-Sometimes other birds come to help one who has a young cowbird to feed,
-and he grows big and strong. When he is full grown he joins a party of
-other cowbirds, and they go off in a flock by themselves.
-
-Some small birds will not submit to this. When they find a cowbird's egg
-in their nest, they go away and leave it there, and make a new nest. Or
-they make a new story, as I told you the yellow warbler does.
-
-The cowbird has a queer little song. It is something like "cluck-see!"
-and he seems to squeeze it out as if it were hard work to say it.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[16] See Appendix, 15.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-THE MEADOW STARLINGS
-
-(_Icteridae_)--Continued
-
-
-THE meadow starlings are short-tailed birds who live on the ground. They
-have long bills and mixed sort of plumage, of browns and yellows.
-
-[Illustration: MEADOWLARK]
-
-Our common one, called the MEADOWLARK or OLD-FIELD LARK, though he is
-not really a lark, is a beautiful bird. He is larger than a robin, and
-his mottled feathers are set off by a bright yellow breast, with a black
-crescent under the throat.
-
-This bird lives in the meadows or pastures, and walks about on the
-ground, where he gets his food. When he wants to sing, he flies up on to
-a fence, or stands up very straight on a bit of turf, or a stone, and
-sings away a long time. It is a sweet song, or rather several sweet
-songs, for he does not always sing the same one.
-
-The mother lark looks like her mate. She makes her nest on the ground,
-and a snug and cozy home it is. It is none of the open, cup-like
-nests that anybody can see into. It has a roof, if you please, and
-sometimes a covered way--like a hall--leading to it. The roof of the
-nest is made by drawing the grass stems over it and weaving them
-together. So it is very hard to find. And it is hidden in the long
-meadow grass besides.
-
-You might think the little family would get hurt when the haymakers came
-to cut the grass. So they would, if they happened to be there. But lark
-babies are out of the egg before that time, and they run about as soon
-as they can stand. Sometimes when a nest has been disturbed, and the
-birds have had to make a second one, the little ones are not out when
-the mowers come on. Then there are apt to be sad times in the family.
-But I have known mowers who carefully cut around a nest, and did not
-hurt the nestlings. That is a good thing to do, for the birds are so
-useful and such fine singers that we want as many as we can have.
-
-The meadowlark is a shy bird, and so is more often heard than seen. His
-song is charming, and he has besides a strange call, a sort of harsh
-sputter, or chatter, sometimes as he flies over. No doubt he has many
-more ways of expressing himself, but these are the ones we most often
-hear.
-
-
-The WESTERN MEADOWLARK looks like the Eastern, except that he is a
-little paler and grayer in color. He has the same general habits, but he
-is a much finer singer. The song is wilder and has more variety, and
-sometimes it is very brilliant. It is different in every way from the
-quiet, rather sad notes that make the Eastern bird so winning.
-
-The Western bird is not so timid as his Eastern brother. He often comes
-into the towns and sings from the tops of houses. The finest singer I
-ever heard sang every day from the peak of a low roof. His song to his
-mate is most charming. It is so low and tender one can hardly hear it.
-
-I once saw a pair of the Western birds nest-making. The little builder
-was busy filling her beak with dried grasses and such things. For these
-she had to fly across the road where I sat. Her mate went with her every
-time. He perched on the fence while she gathered her beakful, watching
-that no harm came to her. When she went back, he flew across with her
-and perched on a tree on that side.
-
-All the time he was singing the sweetest low warble, and all the time he
-was keeping a sharp watch on me. In the West this bird eats beetles,
-grasshoppers, and the disgusting big black crickets that do so much
-damage.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-THE ORIOLE BRANCH
-
-(_Icteridae_)--Continued
-
-
-IT seems odd to put the gay orioles into the Blackbird Family,
-especially as they don't live on the ground either; but that's where
-they belong in the books. Orioles live in the trees, and are fine
-singers. They have sharp-pointed bills, suitable for picking tiny
-insects out of fruit blossoms. They have some of the family color,
-black, but more orange color, or chestnut red, or yellow. They all make
-beautiful nests.
-
-The Baltimore oriole is all over the East, the orchard oriole in the
-South, and the Arizona hooded oriole in the West.
-
-
-The BALTIMORE ORIOLE, who has several other names, such as fire-bird,
-golden robin, and hang-nest, is a very showy bird, in bright orange and
-black. He has a fine though short song. His mate is yellow, and brown
-instead of black, and has a sweet song of her own. Both of them can
-scold as well as any birds I know.
-
-The nest of this oriole is one of the prettiest we have. It is hung high
-up in a tall tree, an elm or willow usually, and near the end of a
-branch, where it swings in the wind. It is a deep bag made of plant
-fibres, bits of string, and other things. The whole has a gray tint and
-a silky look, which make it very attractive.
-
-While the mother bird is sitting, her mate stays near and sings a good
-deal; but when feeding time comes, he works as hard as she in stuffing
-the hungry little mouths.
-
-As soon as the nestlings are off, they go away in a little party. Then
-one who looks sharp may often see an oriole papa going quietly about on
-the ground, with two or three little ones after him, still calling to be
-fed. He doesn't sing any in these busy days. But sometimes, after the
-young have learned to feed themselves, he will sing again a little
-before they all start for their warm winter home in Central America.
-
-It is an anxious time in the bird world when the young are leaving the
-nest. Orioles are so nervous and make such an outcry over their troubles
-that we often hear them. The most common accident is the falling of a
-nestling to the ground. The old birds make so much fuss over it that one
-would think the baby had fallen into the claws of the cat, at the very
-least.
-
-They fly around as if they were crazy, shrieking and calling, for they
-are very fond of their little folk. The youngsters are plucky little
-fellows. One will hop along till he comes to a tree, and then try to
-climb the trunk. If he happens to hit on a tree with rough bark, he can
-do pretty well. He flutters a little way up, and then holds on by the
-claws till rested. Then he flies a little farther, and so he goes till
-he reaches a branch.
-
-If it is a smooth trunk he tries, his troubles are great. Sometimes one
-will scramble up till he comes to a leaf that grows out from the trunk,
-and hang on to that till he is able to go on. But often one is unable to
-keep his hold, and falls back into the grass. I have several times
-picked up a hot and frightened birdling and put him on a branch.
-
-A lady told me an interesting little story, showing how helpful birds
-are to one another. A Baltimore oriole was picked up from the ground
-with his wing broken so that he could not fly. The kind-hearted people
-fixed him comfortably in an attic. They intended to feed him and care
-for him till he got well and could fly.
-
-They left him there with a window open, so that his wild friends could
-bring food if they wished. A little while afterward one of them went up
-to see about the invalid. Behold, he was gone!
-
-They looked for him everywhere, for they knew he could not fly. Suddenly
-they noticed a great deal of oriole chatter out in the yard. Then they
-looked carefully over a tree near the window, and there they saw the
-broken-winged bird in the midst of quite a flock of others.
-
-Of course the outside birds were called by the captive, and they must
-have carried him out in some way. Birds have been seen to carry off one
-who was wounded, in two ways. One way was by two birds each taking in
-his beak a wing of the helpless bird and so flying away with him. This
-has been seen, and more than once, by men who tell the truth.
-
-The second way birds have been seen to help another was by one getting
-under the helpless one and so holding him up on the back. This also has
-been seen by men whose word can be trusted. You remember I told you such
-a story about the shrike.
-
-So many untrue stories are told about the birds that I am very careful
-not to tell you anything that is not strictly true.
-
-
-If you live in the South, you more often see the ORCHARD ORIOLE. He is
-not quite so gay in his dress as the Baltimore. He has chestnut color
-with his black. His mate is different. She is olive on the back, and
-yellow below, and she has bright blue legs and feet, which look as if
-they were covered with kid.
-
-The nest is a hanging one, of course, but it does not usually swing like
-other oriole nests. It is a little supported at the bottom. It is very
-beautiful, for it is made of one kind of fine grass. When it is first
-made, its green color makes it hard to see among the leaves. And as it
-dries, it turns a rich yellow, like bright clean straw. It is not so
-high as the Baltimore's, and not hung to the end of a branch. It is
-often in an apple-tree, for this bird likes to be near people.
-
-The song of the orchard oriole is different from the Baltimore's. It is
-longer, and has more variety. His mate sings also. Her voice is sweeter
-than his and not so loud.
-
-
-If you live in California, the oriole you know will be the ARIZONA
-HOODED ORIOLE. Sometimes he is called the palm-leaf oriole for a reason
-you will soon see. He is a beautiful, slender bird, having bright orange
-color with his black. He wears more black than some of the family. His
-face and throat and tail and wings are of that color, though the wings
-have two white bars. His mate is yellowish below and olive brown above.
-
-This bird makes the regular oriole family cradle. Sometimes it swings
-free like the Baltimore's, but not always. It is made of slender, wiry
-grass, which is green, so that it is hard to see. Sometimes a sort of
-thread from the edge of palm leaves is used.
-
-This bird sometimes selects a droll place for her nest. She swings it
-from the under side of a palm or banana leaf. You know a banana leaf is
-long and wide, and makes a comfortable shade in a hot day; and it does
-just as well for an umbrella when it rains. It is hard to see how a bird
-can fasten a nest to a smooth leaf. But Mrs. Grinnell has seen it done
-in her own yard, and she tells us how the little builder goes to work.
-
-First she takes a thread in her beak and pushes it through the leaf,
-making a hole, of course. Then she flies around to the other side of the
-broad leaf, and standing there a minute she pulls the thread through,
-and pushes it back, making another hole. Thus she goes on, flying from
-one side to the other till she has sewed her bag to the strong leaf.
-
-Except in the place they choose for their nest, these orioles are about
-the same as their Eastern cousins, and oriole little folk are the same
-the world over, I think.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-THE CROW-BLACKBIRD BRANCH
-
-(_Icteridae_)--Continued
-
-
-THE fourth branch of this family is of crow-blackbirds and grackles.
-They have a right to the name of blackbird, for they are quite black. At
-least they look so a little way off, but if one gets near and sees the
-sunshine on them, he will see that they reflect blue or green or purple,
-from their feathers.
-
-Then, too, like others of their family, they go in flocks, and they have
-a dignified walk on the ground. Some birds who are so social that they
-like to live in a crowd prefer to go a little apart to nest. But these
-birds make their rude, clumsy nests all close together.
-
-Blackbirds are fond of corn; who can blame them for that? Thousands of
-them have been shot because they eat it. But farmers who shoot them
-forget, or perhaps they do not know, that corn is not the only thing
-they eat.
-
-Insects as well as birds are fond of corn, and it isn't so easy to keep
-them away. The birds eat great numbers of them, such as grasshoppers,
-caterpillars, beetles, and cut-worms, besides mice. All these creatures
-eat the farmers' crops. So when birds destroy them, they earn some of
-the corn. They do more than clear the fields of troublesome insects,
-they eat great quantities of the seeds of weeds that the farmer is
-always fighting.
-
-Blackbirds are most often seen on the ground, walking around with great
-dignity. They are looking for food in the grass, or in the field in
-ploughing time. When they are closely watched, it is often found that
-they are not in mischief.
-
-Mr. Warren, State Ornithologist of Pennsylvania, tells a story which
-shows how easy it is to be mistaken. He was with a friend who had thirty
-acres of corn growing, and was much vexed to see blackbirds walking
-about among the young plants. They seemed very busy about something, and
-he was sure they were pulling up his crop. So he got out his guns, and
-Mr. Warren went with him to punish the birds.
-
-They shot thirty-one of them. Then they began to see what they had been
-eating. In all the thirty-one, only seven had the least bit of corn, and
-even they were mostly filled with insects. The rest were stuffed full of
-insects which do much harm to young corn, mostly cut-worms.
-
-The farmer had killed thirty-one birds who were working for him as hard
-as they could. No money could hire help that would do so much good as
-they were doing.
-
-
-In the Eastern States we have the CROW BLACKBIRD, or PURPLE GRACKLE, and
-the BRONZED GRACKLE, whose habits are the same.
-
-The purple grackle is a handsome bird, larger than a robin, with very
-light eyes. His plumage looks black in the shade, but when the sun is on
-it, shows rich green and blue, and it shines like satin. The bronzed
-grackle shows purple, and blue, and green, with metallic bronze on the
-back.
-
-The purple grackle is said to eat corn, and also the eggs and young of
-other birds. But what he eats has been found out by the Agricultural
-Department, in the way I told you of. It is given out by them that he
-does not do so much harm to nests as has been said, and among the crops
-he does good enough to pay for all the corn he eats.
-
-It is very hard to see just what a bird is eating. It is not even safe
-to believe all we think we see.
-
-The only time the purple grackle can do more harm than good is when he
-comes with a big crowd of his friends, and settles down to spend the
-winter. Then he should be driven away from crops.
-
-I want you to understand me about this. I do not say that these birds
-never eat the eggs and young of others. What I do say is, that there is
-plenty of evidence to show that they do it not half so much as people
-say. I have watched birds for twenty years, as closely, I believe, as
-any one ever watched them, and I never saw any of the bad deeds that are
-laid to the blue jay, or the shrike, or the kingbird, or the purple
-grackle. They may be guilty occasionally, but they are not the villains
-they are often said to be.
-
-Besides, however bad we may call a few birds, we are ourselves worse.
-Birds kill only to eat. Many of them are made to feed upon each other,
-and cannot live in any other way. They kill quickly, and do not
-generally--if they ever do--torture their prey.
-
-How is it with us? We kill for sport, or for useless show, and we kill
-in a way that often wounds and leaves our victim to suffer tortures
-before he dies. Do you think it is fair for us to say hard things about
-the birds?
-
-
-In the Rocky Mountains and west of them the common blackbird is BREWER'S
-BLACKBIRD, sometimes called blue-headed grackle. He is not so shy as
-his brother of the East. He is amiable and friendly with people, and as
-familiar as the robin in New England. He is often seen in the streets of
-towns. He will come into yards, and even take food from a doorstep.
-
-Brewer's blackbird is a restless, uneasy fellow, like most of his
-family. He is always bustling about, and flying hither and thither with
-rustling wings.
-
-In summer, these birds feed mostly upon insects, which they find on the
-ground. They have an amusing way of being fair in their feeding. As they
-walk about in little social parties looking for food, those who come
-last in the string find the insects nearly all picked up before they get
-a chance. So they take this clever way of getting their turn at the good
-things. Every few minutes those in the rear rise and fly over the heads
-of their friends and alight just before them. So they have the first
-pick for a while. Then, in a few minutes, those left behind fly over
-their heads, and take the lead for a time. So, without any quarreling,
-each one has a fair chance with all the rest. Other birds have found out
-this way of playing fair. I have seen great blue herons three feet tall
-do the same thing.
-
-In winter, when insects are scarce, the blackbird turns to grain and the
-seeds of weeds. But it has been found that he does more good by the
-weeds he keeps down than harm by the grain he eats.
-
-Brewer's blackbird usually nests in trees, not very high. One time a
-naturalist going about in Arizona, where are few or no trees, found a
-curious thing,--a good many blackbird nests, a little settlement one
-might call it, on the ground, and all strung along close to the edge of
-a steep bank. At first he could not see why the birds had chosen to be
-on the edge of a precipice. Then he remembered that horses and cattle
-roamed over the country, and these animals are careful never to graze
-close to an edge which might crumble and give them a fall. He concluded
-that the birds had wit enough to know that. If their nests were out on
-the plains, they would be likely to be stepped on, but near the edge,
-they were safe from hoofs.
-
-The common call of Brewer's blackbird is a harsh "chack;" but in the
-spring he turns musical, and serenades his mate with what we must call
-songs, because songs are what he intends. They are droll enough to
-listen to, and not very sweet.
-
-This bird is about the size of a robin, with violet-colored head in the
-sunlight. His mate is slate-colored.
-
-Birds who live in a crowd learn to be fair in their treatment of one
-another. An interesting story is told of the way a flock of blackbirds
-go to bed at night. They come to the roosting-place in little parties
-from all the country around. One would suppose the first one to get
-there would choose his place to sleep, and let the last one take what
-was left.
-
-But no! as they arrive, they alight in some big old tree outside the
-roosting-place. When all are in, they fly up together, circle around for
-a while, then all settle at the same time in the place where they are to
-sleep.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-THE CROW FAMILY
-
-(_Corvidae_)[17]
-
-
-THIS is a large family. Some of our most intelligent birds belong to it.
-There are first the crows, much larger than a robin and dressed in
-black. They have long, pointed wings, and tails square at the end. They
-live in a crowd, and walk on the ground.
-
-Then there are the jays, about the size of a robin, all bright-colored
-birds. They have short, rounded wings, and long tails which come down
-almost to a point in the middle.
-
-And then the magpies, between the other two in size. They have tails
-longer and more pointed than the jays, and are dressed in black with
-showy white markings.
-
-
-The common AMERICAN CROW is a bird that everybody knows. He lives all
-over our country, and seems to like one part as well as another. There
-is enough to be said about this bird to fill this whole book. So I shall
-not try to tell all about him.
-
-The crow is thought by many people to be the most knowing bird in
-America, and he is the one who has been most abused. He does some
-mischief, it is true, but he does a great deal more good. So say the
-officers of the Department who have looked into his food. They have
-found that he does pull up some corn; but he stuffs himself and his
-family with thousands, and even millions, of grubs, and insects, and
-mice, and other small creatures, that would have done far more damage to
-the crops than he.
-
-Farmers have often killed or driven away the crows, because they thought
-they were hurting their crops. But sometimes they have found out their
-mistake, and have been glad to get them back again.
-
-A story comes from the West which shows what I mean. One year the
-farmers were alarmed to see a great many crows around their fields. They
-had never seen so many there. Of course they thought they had come to
-eat the corn, so they began to kill them. I won't tell you the ugly
-story of the war against the birds. After it had gone on awhile, the
-farmers began to notice that crows were not the only ones who had come.
-A new grub that they had never seen before was on hand. There were
-millions of them, and they were always hungry. Young corn plants seemed
-to suit them, and when corn was gone, they began eating the grass.
-
-It never came into the farmers' heads that the birds had anything to do
-with the grubs. So they kept up their war on the crows till few were
-left.
-
-It's easier to drive away birds than insects, so the grubs went on
-eating. There were no crows left to trouble, and yet the crops got
-smaller every year. At last some one had sense enough to see that the
-crows had come on purpose to eat the grubs, and that they had driven
-away their best friends, the most useful helpers they could possibly
-have.
-
-When they saw how stupid they had been, they began to coax the birds
-back. They sent out and had crows caught and brought to their fields to
-work for them. The birds took hold of the business, and made short work
-of the corn-eating grub, and the farmers learned a good lesson.
-
-You may think it strange that the crows should know where the grubs
-were, but birds are very sharp to find their food. It is well known that
-when there gets to be an unusual number of insects in one place, more
-birds will come to feed on them. Some time when you are in the country
-when grass is cut, notice how many birds will come to eat the
-grasshoppers and other creatures that are uncovered when the hay is
-taken away.
-
-The crows take the same fair way of going to roost that the Brewer's
-blackbirds do.
-
-I could tell you stories--true ones, too--all day about this bird, and
-his services to the farmer. We all know how wise he is, and how hard it
-is to trap him.
-
-I will give you one little story, to show his kindness to his fellows.
-Then, when you have a chance to watch one, I hope you will take pains to
-see for yourself what he does and what he eats. Do not believe all you
-hear or read about him, for I'm sorry to say there are some persons who
-like so well to tell a sensational story that they do not take any
-trouble to find out if it is true.
-
-The story is this. Two crows were caught and kept in a large cage out of
-doors. It happened to be a time when food for birds was rather scarce.
-Some one noticed that the birds seemed to eat a good deal, and he set
-himself to watch them. He found that the prisoners in the cage were
-giving some of their food through the bars to their hungry friends
-outside. Could men be more unselfish?
-
-There is no end to the funny pranks that are told of crows who have been
-tamed and lived with people. One that I heard of liked to get out in the
-yard when clothes from the wash were hung out. He would walk along on
-the clothesline and pull out every clothespin, carrying each one to the
-roof and laying it safely away. Of course this let the wet garments fall
-in the dirt, and he was scolded well for his mischief. Then he would fly
-up to the roof and throw every pin down to the ground, as if he said,
-"Well, take your old clothespins!"
-
-Another tame crow was very fond of pulling over a work-basket, and
-scattering the spools and thimbles and other things in it. One day he
-got hold of a paper of needles. This he opened, and then went on to hide
-them, which crows always like to do with everything. He took each needle
-and pushed it into the bed, as if it were a cushion, and hammered each
-one in out of sight.
-
-
-I hope you know the BLUE JAY. He is a beautiful bird in different shades
-of blue, set off with white and black, and with a fine crest. His mate
-is the same. This is the jay we know in the East and South.
-
-[Illustration: BLUE JAY]
-
-He is a noisy bird, full of fun and antics. He makes himself heard
-wherever he goes. This has given him the name of being quarrelsome. It
-is often said that he is always fighting. But that is a mistake, made
-because people do not look closely enough. He is boisterous and jolly,
-but he rarely quarrels.
-
-There is one time in his life when he is as still as a mouse. Then he
-comes to his tree so quietly that you cannot hear him. That is when
-there is a nest to look after.
-
-The nest of a blue jay is usually not very high, in a tree. While his
-mate is sitting, he takes the best care of her. He brings food to her,
-and often sings to her. This song is very low; one can hardly hear it;
-but it is one of the sweetest of bird songs.
-
-No bird is more loving to his little folk than the blue jay, and not one
-is more frantic when anything happens to them. James Russell Lowell, the
-poet, loved the birds, and has written delightful things about them. He
-once found a family of young blue jays who seemed to be in trouble. He
-had a ladder brought, and went up to the nest to see if he could help
-them. He found that they had got caught in the nest lining, and could
-not get away. They were full grown, and the old birds had worked hard
-from morning till night to keep them fed.
-
-As soon as Mr. Lowell saw what was the matter, he took out his knife to
-cut the strings that held them. At first when he came near, the old
-birds were very much frightened. They flew around his head and cried,
-and were going to fight him. But jays are wise birds, and in a moment
-they saw that he did not mean to hurt them. So they perched close by
-him, so near he could put his hand on them. Then they watched him while
-he cut the little ones loose. All of them could fly, and they did, at
-once.
-
-One of the nestlings had been so tightly held that one leg was withered
-and dead, but the next day Mr. Lowell saw him hopping about the garden
-path, on one leg, while his parents brought him food, and took great
-care of him.
-
-The blue jay, like most birds, is kind to others. One man found a little
-flock taking care of an old, blind jay. They fed him, and led him to
-water to bathe. They warned him of danger, and in every way looked out
-for his comfort as if he were a nestling.
-
-Besides being a singer, this bird is a mimic. He can imitate the songs
-of other birds, as well as many other sounds. A lady once had a blue jay
-who had fallen from the nest. She brought him up, and he was very tame.
-She told me that he learned to sing like a mockingbird, and did it
-almost as well. This bird was very fond of her. When she tried to give
-him his freedom, he wouldn't have it. If she slipped away from him, he
-would sit up in a tree and scream like a lost child. Then, when she came
-into his sight, he would fly down to her shoulder and rub his head
-against her cheek like a kitten, he was so happy to be back with her.
-
-The blue jay is a useful bird. Dr. Brewer says that one pair of jays
-will feed their young in one season five hundred thousand caterpillars;
-also that one pair of jays will destroy one million insect eggs in a
-winter.
-
-Many hard things have been said about this bird,--for one thing, that he
-eats eggs and young birds. You will notice, however, that many who
-repeat these stories about him say, "I have not seen the bird do so, but
-some one else has." Testimony like this is worth nothing. Such things
-are copied from one book to another because it is much easier to take
-what is set down in the books than to go out and see for one's self.
-Often a story which has no truth in it is said over and over till people
-believe it because they have heard it so often.
-
-Believe me, the blue jay is not half so bad as he is painted, and he has
-many lovable traits to make up for what he does do.
-
-Mr. Keyser brought up a young blue jay from the nest. He put him for a
-while into a cage with two young orioles. Like all young birds, all
-three of the youngsters were hungry, and expected everybody to feed
-them. So the young jay opened wide his mouth, and waited for something
-good to drop into it. He was met by the two orioles with their mouths
-wide open. There they stood, face to face, all asking to be fed. It was
-a funny sight.
-
-Then the blue jay baby was put into another cage, where were two young
-catbirds. To these he was very loving. He would sidle up to them and
-caress them, stroking their backs and wings with his bill. He insisted
-on sleeping between the two on the perch. He looked very droll with a
-small bird on each side of him, all snuggled up together.
-
-After a while the blue jay had a whole cage to himself. Then the other
-cages were moved to the front porch, and he was left alone on the back
-porch. This did not please him at all; he was lonely. He called and
-cried and fretted about till he was placed beside the others. Then he
-gave a cry of joy, and really squealed with delight.
-
-
-The West is richer than the East in jays. There are several in the
-Rocky Mountains and California. STELLER'S JAY is said to represent the
-Eastern bird I have been telling about. He is different in looks and
-larger. He is darker blue, with some sooty brown, and he has a fine
-crest. But he is the same noisy, jolly fellow as his cousin on the
-Atlantic side of the country.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN MAGPIE]
-
-
-If your home is in the West, beyond the Mississippi River, of course you
-know the AMERICAN MAGPIE. He is a large, splendid fellow, who looks
-especially fine when he is flying over your head.
-
-The magpie is all in black and white: white below and in shoulder
-patches, and black on the breast and above. In the sunlight he shows
-purple and blue and green shades over the black. He has a very long
-tail, which is wide in the middle and runs down almost to a point at the
-end. This is very showy, when he spreads it wide in flying.
-
-In California the magpie shows a curious variation. On one side of the
-mountains the magpie has a yellow bill, but the magpie on the other side
-has a black one, though in every other way they seem to be the same.
-
-The magpie is a social bird. Even in nesting time he likes plenty of
-neighbors. A party of them will settle in a little grove and build
-several nests in it. The nests of this bird are the queerest bird homes
-you ever saw. They look like big covered baskets. They are half the size
-of a bushel basket, and made of sticks outside. There is an opening on
-each side for the bird to go in and out. Those I have seen were in the
-tops of low trees.
-
-The beautiful tail of the magpie seems to be a great care to him. When
-he flies,--as I said,--he spreads it wide and makes a great show with
-it. When he is going about on a tree, he jerks and twitches it all the
-time. No doubt every jerk means something, if we could only understand.
-When on the ground, he holds the precious tail up carefully, so that it
-shall not touch the earth. He is a very dignified bird when walking
-about in this way, looking for the grubs, grasshoppers, crickets, and
-other creatures on which he feeds. But sometimes he has no dignity at
-all. He scolds, and screams, and acts like a bad child. He isn't
-particular about his food. He will eat almost anything, even scraps from
-a kitchen.
-
-Major Bendire tells a comical story of the cunning of some magpies in
-getting food away from a dog. The dog carried his bone with some meat on
-it to the lawn in front of the major's tent, and lay down to enjoy it,
-dog-fashion. In a minute or two, a little party of six magpies came
-around, probably hoping to be invited to dinner. The dog did not take
-the hint, but went on gnawing.
-
-Then the birds seemed to consider, and after a few minutes they placed
-themselves around the dog. One stood right in front of his nose about
-two feet away. Another one took his place close to the dog's tail, while
-two stood on each side.
-
-When all the birds were ready, the one by the tail gave it a sharp peck.
-No dog could stand that insult. The victim forgot his bone, wheeled
-around, and dashed after that bird. He did not catch him with the first
-grab, and the wily bird fluttered away. He did not go fast enough to
-show the dog he could not catch him, but he led him on and kept him
-eager to get at him as long as he could.
-
-But what happened to the dog's dinner all this time? Of course you have
-guessed that the instant the dog left, the five hungry magpies pounced
-upon the bone. They didn't mind eating at the second table. They knew
-their time was short, and they made good use of it. I'm afraid they
-"gobbled."
-
-When the dog saw that he couldn't catch the magpie, he thought of his
-dinner, and came back. The birds stepped one side, and he took his
-place again.
-
-Of course the birds were not half satisfied, and besides, one of them
-had not had even a taste. So they made ready to play the little trick
-again. Now see their fair play with one another! The bird who had coaxed
-the dog away had his turn at the head of the table, while another one
-did the teasing. They repeated this several times, and each time a
-different bird led the dog away.
-
-The major was a trained observer, and he could tell the birds apart. One
-had a longer tail, another had a broken feather, and another was
-smaller. So he could easily see that each time a different bird had the
-best chance. He was sure they had planned the whole thing out.
-
-I once had a chance to study the ways of some magpies. The birds were
-busy in their nests, and I was well hidden and quiet, so they did not
-see me. I heard much soft, gentle talk from them, and at last a sweet
-song. I was much surprised at this, and hoped to know a good deal more
-about them, but the next time I called on them, they saw me. Such a row
-as they made! They flew around my head, shouting and screaming at me,
-till I was glad to get out of the grove. I could not blame the birds,
-for magpies are much prized as cage-birds. They readily learn to talk,
-and are intelligent and interesting pets, so that the nests are robbed
-all the time. Of course they are ready to fight for their little ones.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[17] See Appendix, 16.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-THE LARK FAMILY
-
-(_Alaudidae_)[18]
-
-
-THERE are a good many kinds of larks in the world, but only one comes to
-us, the HORNED LARK, or shore lark. He differs a little in color in the
-various places he is found over our broad country, but not enough to
-call him another species.
-
-In places where there is a great deal of rain, birds take on a slightly
-different shade from their brothers who live in dry places. So there are
-several varieties of the horned lark. But dress isn't everything, and,
-after all, he is the same bird in habits and manners wherever we find
-him in the United States. He is streaked brown on the back, and white
-below, with yellow throat and black and white markings.
-
-
-The way you may always know a PRAIRIE HORNED LARK, of whom I will speak,
-is by the pretty little tufts of feathers that stand up on his head
-like horns, and the very long nail on his hind toe.
-
-[Illustration: DESERT HORNED LARK]
-
-Another way you may know this bird is that he lives on the ground, and
-never perches in a tree. Sometimes he gets up on a fence to sing, but he
-likes best to run along the road, or in a field, and he never--never
-hops. The place to look for him is a field or pasture, or on a country
-road.
-
-When insects are abroad, he eats the more dainty small ones, young
-grasshoppers and locusts before they get big and tough, small beetles
-and larvae; and baby larks are fed on them. But he doesn't starve when
-they are gone; he is fond of seeds of weeds and grasses.
-
-The nest of the horned lark is on the ground, and the little mother is
-very clever in hiding it, and not showing people where it is. Many
-birds, you know, will stay on the nest till one almost steps on them,
-and then fly up with a great fuss, thus telling their secret. When the
-wise little lark sees one coming, she quietly slips off her nest. Then
-she crouches to the ground, and creeps away. When she thinks she is far
-enough, she rises to her full height, and begins to eat, or to walk
-around as if she had nothing on her mind, and there were no such thing
-as a nest anywhere about. No matter how long one may stay there
-hoping to find the nest, she will not go back, not even to see if it is
-safe, so long as any one is near. If all birds were so wily, there would
-be fewer nests robbed, and we should have more birds.
-
-The little home so carefully guarded is well made. The bird scratches
-out a little hollow and lines it with grass or thistledown, that is, if
-she can't get what she likes best. Her choice is for nice soft mullein
-leaves, which she pulls to pieces. These, you know, are thick and
-smooth, and must make a warm, dry bed for the little larks.
-
-The brave little mother nests so early that she is often caught in a
-snowstorm. Nests have been found with the bird on them, when the snow
-had to be brushed away to get at her, actually sitting under the snow.
-
-When the young larks can run about, and before they can fly, the father
-takes them in charge. Then the mother sits again, and hatches out
-another brood.
-
-The horned lark sings on the wing, as does the skylark of Europe that
-we've heard so much about. It is supposed that he cannot equal that
-famous bird, but so few have heard him, it is hardly safe to say so. I
-once heard a horned lark sing. He ran across the road in front of the
-carriage, flew to a fence, and gave an exquisite little song. If it had
-come down to us while the singer was soaring about over our heads, I
-think few bird songs could have excelled it.
-
-The feather tufts which are called horns stand up when the bird is
-excited. Usually they lie back nearly flat on the head.
-
-In the picture you can see one of these birds in his usual attitude,
-walking.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[18] See Appendix, 17.
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-THE FLYCATCHING FAMILY
-
-(_Tyrannidae_)[19]
-
-
-LARKS may be scarce, but we have plenty of flycatchers, and they all
-look very much alike. They are mostly in dull colors, and they have a
-way of raising the head feathers which gives them a little crest. Then
-they have rather thick necks, and they sit up very straight on the
-perch.
-
-They catch living flies, as you see by the name, and they have their own
-way of doing it. No flycatcher ever scrambles around like a fussy little
-warbler, snatching a fly here and there. Far from it! It is a dignified
-family, and none of them ever seems to be in a hurry.
-
-The true flycatcher way to get a dinner is to sit still and wait. The
-very babies in the nest are patient little fellows. They never make half
-the row over their dinner that young robins do. They could give lessons
-in table manners to some young folks I have seen. And waiting seems to
-be a good way, for nobody is better fed than a flycatcher.
-
-[Illustration: KINGBIRD]
-
-On his perch the waiting bird sits perfectly still, but keeps a sharp
-lookout all around him. When a fly or other insect comes near that he
-thinks he will like, he dashes out and catches it as it flies. Then he
-goes back to his perch and waits for another.
-
-Some of the family have the habit of singing as they wait. The wood
-pewee drawls out his sweet "pee-u-ee," the phoebe sings his sharp
-"phoe-be" by the hour, and the least flycatcher snaps out his "chebec"
-till we are tired of hearing him.
-
-Flycatchers are classed among birds who do not sing, but several of them
-do sing,--not loud, like a robin, but low, quiet songs to the mate or
-the nestlings.
-
-
-One of the best known of the flycatchers all over the country is the
-KINGBIRD. He is a little smaller than a robin, and all in brownish
-black, with white breast. He has also white tips to his tail feathers,
-which look very fine when he spreads it out wide in flying.
-
-Among the head feathers of the kingbird is a small spot of orange color.
-This is called in the books a "concealed patch" because it is seldom
-seen, it is so hidden by the dark feathers.
-
-This bird does much good by eating many insects. It is often said that
-he eats bees. But a curious thing has been found out about this habit.
-It seems he has a choice in bees. He is fond of the drones which make no
-honey, and so are not useful in a hive. He will hunt drones all day, but
-he is shy of a honey bee. Do you know why? The bird has not told us, but
-we can guess that it is because the honey bee is armed with a sting, and
-can make it very uncomfortable for any bird who catches her.
-
-There is another reason too why the bird may prefer the drone. The honey
-bee usually flies low, where the flowers are, while the drone isn't
-after flowers and flies higher in the air. The kingbird sits higher than
-the honey bee flies, and the drones are the ones that come near him.
-
-Another insect that the kingbird is fond of is the robber fly, which
-destroys hundreds of honey bees. That should make every bee-keeper his
-friend.
-
-These things have been found out in the way I told you, by shooting the
-birds to see what they had been eating.
-
-Mr. Bryant, who knows birds well, tells of a bee-keeper in California
-who saw a great many kingbirds among his bees. Of course he thought they
-were eating them, and he killed one hundred of them. On looking into
-their stomachs to see if they had eaten honey bees, he found them filled
-with drones. They had been working for him all the time, for every
-bee-keeper likes to have drones killed.
-
-It has been said that the kingbird is annoying to other birds, and he is
-called a tyrant. I wanted to know if this was true. I did not go to
-books to find out, for many people--as I have told you--do not study for
-themselves, but repeat what some one else has said. The way I took to
-find out was to notice the ways of every kingbird I could see. For many
-years I have watched them hours at a time, for weeks together. I spend
-every summer among the birds, and almost everywhere I go I find
-kingbirds.
-
-In this way I have found out that the kingbird is one of the most
-peaceable of birds. He drives strangers away from the tree where his
-nest is, and so does every other bird. The crow he seems to consider his
-enemy, and often flies after him, but excepting that, I have never seen
-a kingbird disturb any bird who was minding his own business. He is not
-half so much of a tyrant as the robin or the hummingbird.
-
-The kingbird is quiet and devoted to his family. He seems never to tire
-of catching insects. While young ones are in the nest, he may usually
-be seen from morning till night, sitting very straight upon a low perch,
-looking for flies of many kinds.
-
-Let me tell you a little story of a kingbird which I can assure you is
-true, for a gentleman whose word may be relied upon saw it near enough
-to be perfectly sure of the facts.
-
-A big bird, he did not notice what kind, was flying off with a nestling
-robin in his claws. All at once a kingbird flew at him so fiercely that
-he had to drop the young one to defend himself. The youngster could not
-fly, and of course began to fall. When the kingbird saw that, he left
-the thief and flew under the little bird. He held it up on his back, and
-flew carefully to the ground, where it slipped off safely.
-
-When a kingbird has been tamed and kept in a house, he has been found to
-be a very knowing fellow. One that I heard of saw that the people were
-friendly, and he lost all fear of them. His greatest pleasure seemed to
-be to keep warm. He would cuddle up to a lighted lamp, and dearly liked
-to crawl under the bedclothes. This pet was quiet and dignified, never a
-chatterbox. The only sounds he made were a few low notes like thanks,
-when he was fed.
-
-The nest of the kingbird is usually placed in a low tree like the
-apple-tree. It is made of anything that comes handy. I have seen one of
-white wool where sheep were kept, and one of gray moss on the seashore
-where it is found in plenty.
-
-
-The Western kingbird differs in color from the Eastern. He is more gray,
-with under parts bright yellow. He is said to be more social and more
-noisy than the sober Eastern bird. But in other respects they are much
-alike.
-
-This bird has been called quarrelsome, but persons who look closely at
-birds have said that what careless observers have called quarrels are
-really play. For the Western kingbird, the ARKANSAS KINGBIRD of the
-books, is a rather jolly fellow, says Major Bendire.
-
-All flycatchers are useful and should be carefully protected, says the
-same well-informed writer.
-
-
-The WOOD PEWEE is another common flycatcher. He is not generally seen
-about houses like the phoebe, who calls from the peak of the barn. He
-may be found in the orchard or the edge of the woods. There he will
-stand on a fence or low branch and sing or call by the hour, every few
-minutes flying out to catch a passing insect.
-
-This bird is in dark colors, with whitish breast and two white
-wing-bars. His common call is a plaintive, long-drawn-out "pee-u-ee"
-and sometimes "pee-ay," but he can sing a droll little song. One lady
-who watched a wood pewee build her nest heard her sing to herself as she
-worked what sounded like "O-wee-wee-wee."
-
-The nest made by this little mother is very pretty. It is most often on
-a dead limb where a branch starts out, making a broad foundation. For
-this reason the bird is called in the South, the dead-limb bird. The
-nests are not all alike. I have seen many closely covered with lichen,
-and some made of gray moss so thin that the eggs could be seen through
-it. Whatever it is made of, it is low and flat like a saucer, and so
-much like the branch it is on that it is not easy to see.
-
-Like other bird mothers, the wood pewee is devoted to her nestlings. She
-will shield them from the rain by sitting close on the nest and making
-an umbrella of herself. And when the sun comes down very hot on them,
-she has been seen to perch on the edge of the nest and spread her wings
-to act as a shade for them. It is pretty to see this bird with her
-little family when they have left the nest and are being taught to take
-care of themselves. She makes many sweet little noises which sound like
-talk, or a sort of whispering.
-
-
-The WESTERN WOOD PEWEE looks like his Eastern brother, but he is a very
-different bird. His dress is about the same, and he catches his flies in
-pewee fashion, but his voice is not in the least like that we hear on
-the Atlantic side of the country.
-
-The Eastern wood pewee has a low, sweet voice, of which one cannot get
-tired. But the bird of the West has loud, harsh notes, so dismal in tone
-that they are painful to listen to. His song is almost the only really
-unpleasant bird song I know.
-
-The nest of this bird is a rather deep cup saddled on to a large limb.
-When it is in a cottonwood grove, it is covered with the sticky white
-cotton from the trees. It is very pretty when fresh, but it soon gets
-soiled, and then it is not nice to look at or to handle.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[19] See Appendix, 18.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-THE HUMMING FAMILY
-
-(_Trochilidae_)[20]
-
-
-THIS is an American family, and no country in the world can show a more
-beautiful one. There are more than four hundred species, and some of
-them hardly bigger than a bee. All of these birds have brilliant colors
-that are called metallic. That is, they glitter like metal, and they
-show different colors when they are turned different ways.
-
-All hummingbirds fly very swiftly. You know how they go,--not straight
-like most birds, but darting one way and another so quickly they can
-hardly be seen. As they fly, their wings move so fast they look almost
-like little clouds, and we hear the low noise we call humming.
-
-Hummingbirds eat nothing but tiny insects, and the honey of flowers,
-which they suck up through their long bill. They take their food without
-alighting, for they can hold themselves still before a flower, with the
-wonderful wings, as long as they choose.
-
-The bill of a hummingbird is much longer than his head. It is something
-like a pair of tubes through which he can draw up the sweet juices he
-likes. The tongue is long too, and it can be pushed out far beyond the
-end of the bill. It looks like a stiff white thread.
-
-We have in the Eastern States but one species, the ruby-throat, but
-there are several in California.
-
-
-No bird is more charming than our common RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD. He
-is most often seen flitting about among the flowers. But now and then
-one may catch him sitting demurely on a dead twig, dressing his tiny
-feathers.
-
-This bird is all in green, with a brilliant ruby-colored throat, which
-looks like a gem as he darts about. His mate is in green also, but her
-throat is white.
-
-You would not think this pretty midget could be a fighter, but he is.
-When a hummingbird finds a vine full of sweet blossoms, or a bed of
-bright nasturtiums, or any good place to feed in, he claims the whole of
-it for himself. He tries to drive away every other hummingbird who
-comes near it. Sometimes two of them will carry on a quarrel over a
-honeysuckle vine for days.
-
-The hummingbird is the most pugnacious bird in America. If he were as
-big as a crow, he would be a terror to man and beast, for he is afraid
-of nothing. This spirited mite of a bird will even attack an eagle, who
-is big enough to eat him at a mouthful. He beats him too, for he comes
-down on top of his head, where the big, clumsy fellow cannot get at him.
-There he pecks and pulls out feathers till the eagle is glad to get out
-of his clutches.
-
-A hummingbird's nest is one of the prettiest things in the world. It is
-not much bigger than a walnut, and is made of soft plant down, usually
-of a yellowish gray color.
-
-Perhaps you don't see how plant down can be made to keep in shape,
-without twigs or grasses to hold it. If you could see the bird make it,
-you would understand at once. She brings her stuff in small mouthfuls,
-and works it into a solid mass by strong efforts with beak and feet. She
-pokes and prods each tiny bunch as she brings it, till she makes it all
-hold together. It is a sort of felt.
-
-Then the little worker covers the outside with bits of lichen picked off
-the trees, and held on, it is said, by cobwebs. This makes the nest
-look exactly like the branch it is on. So it is very hard to see.
-
-It takes a hummingbird several days of hard work to make a nest, because
-she can bring only a little at a time. She does it alone too; her mate
-has not been seen to help her at all.
-
-I think the male ruby-throat does not help in the nest-building because
-the little mother will not let him. She knows just how the cradle is to
-be made, and she doesn't want him to bother her. She likes to have her
-nest to herself just as she likes to have her honeysuckle to herself. I
-don't say positively that is the reason, you know; I only guess it is.
-
-After the nest is made, and two eggs about as big as small beans are
-laid, the hummingbird begins to sit. When the nestlings come out of the
-egg, they are about the size of honey bees, with bills no larger than
-the head of a common pin. Twenty-one days they stay in the nest and are
-fed by their hard-working little mother.
-
-When the twins get their feathers, and their bills are growing longer
-and longer, they sit up across the top of the nest, side by side. Then
-they are very pretty, and not at all afraid of people. They will let one
-gently stroke their backs. They will even answer in a soft murmur one
-who talks to them.
-
-Hummingbirds are never so afraid of people as other birds. They are
-easily tamed. But they should never be caged, for they will not live
-long in a house. They need food that we cannot give them.
-
-A man had a hummingbird whom he kept alive a long time by letting him go
-free when he seemed to need change of food. He would fly off, but always
-came back. After the bird got to be very tame, the man brought two young
-hummingbirds and put them in the cage with him. He did not notice them
-much till they began to droop. Then the man opened the door to let them
-out.
-
-At once the elder bird took the little ones in charge, and coaxed them
-to fly out with him. He led them to a place where he had found the tiny
-spiders these birds like, and showed them how to get what they wanted.
-They all ate their fill and then came back to the house, where they were
-well contented to be.
-
-The way the mother hummingbird feeds her babies is curious. When she
-comes with food, she alights on the edge of the nest, and pulls a little
-one up so that she can get at it. Then she runs her long, slim bill down
-its throat, and pokes the food in with little jerks. It looks as if it
-would kill the youngster, but he seems to like it. Anyway, he grows
-very fast, and--as I said--in three weeks he is beautifully feathered,
-with a bill as long as his mother's, and ready to fly.
-
-A lady who had two young hummingbirds told me that they slept so soundly
-they were like dead birds. One could take them up and carry them about,
-and they would not wake. In cold weather she often wrapped one up in a
-piece of flannel and laid him in a soft, warm place, and he never
-stirred till morning.
-
-The way she got this pair of birds was interesting. She was walking in
-the woods and broke a dead branch from a tree, to use for something. On
-turning it over she saw a nest, and strange to say two little birds in
-it. She had been holding it upside down, but they had held on so tightly
-that they did not fall out.
-
-The lady did not know what to do. She did not want baby hummingbirds,
-but she couldn't put the branch back, and she was afraid their mother
-would not find them if she left them. So she took them home. She had no
-trouble to feed them, and they lived with her six weeks, and died by
-accident at last.
-
-It is thought that the male ruby-throat does not come to the nest at
-all, but he must have some way of knowing how things are going on. At
-Mrs. Wright's summer home a mother hummingbird was killed in a
-hailstorm, while young were in the nest. At once the father, or at least
-a male bird, came and fed and took care of the nestlings till they flew.
-
-
-In California one of the most common of this family is ANNA'S
-HUMMINGBIRD. He is green, with a throat and crown of changeable colors,
-lilac and red.
-
-The nest of this bird is usually, like the ruby-throat's, of plant down
-covered with lichens. But some have been found made of the blossoms of
-the eucalyptus, or gum-tree. This bird is as easily tamed as the
-ruby-throat, and seems to act a good deal like him.
-
-Mrs. Grinnell found a nest in her yard in California. The mother allowed
-herself to be photographed in many positions. The young ones were never
-afraid, and did not mind the camera in the least. Hummingbirds never
-seem to have any fear of people.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[20] See Appendix, 19.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-THE SWIFT FAMILY
-
-(_Micropodidae_)[21]
-
-
-SWIFTS are curious birds, with strange habits. The one we know by sight
-in the East is the chimney swift. Most like him in the West is Vaux's
-swift. His ways are like the common chimney swift's, and his looks
-nearly the same.
-
-
-The CHIMNEY SWIFT is often called the chimney swallow, but it is very
-easy to tell one from a swallow. One way is, that when a swift is flying
-about over our heads, he looks as if he had no tail. The tail is very
-short, not half so long as the wing. He looks more like a bat than a
-bird.
-
-Then the swift flies in a different way. A swallow soars a good deal,
-that is, moves without beating the wings, a sort of gliding through the
-air. But a swift beats the wings much more frequently. A swallow will
-often alight on a telegraph-wire or a roof. A swift is said never to
-alight except to sleep.
-
-This bird is so much at home on wing that he even gets the twigs to make
-the nest while flying. These twigs are the smallest ones on the ends of
-dead branches, and are easily snapped off. The bird flies at them,
-snatches one in beak or feet, breaks it off, and goes right on, without
-stopping.
-
-When he gets his twig, he carries it to a dark, sooty chimney. A queer
-place for a home, surely. They used to choose a hollow tree or a cave to
-live in, and that seems much nicer. But chimneys are now more plentiful
-than hollow trees. And besides, they are nearer the bird's food. So
-chimney homes are now the fashion in the swift family.
-
-To make a swift nest, the twigs are glued to the chimney in the shape of
-a little bracket. The glue is the saliva of the bird, which is gummy,
-and gets hard as it dries, and looks like isinglass.
-
-The mouth of a chimney swift is very odd. You have heard of "stretching
-a mouth from ear to ear." That's just what the swift does every time he
-opens his. It needs to be big, for he gathers up his food in it. While
-he is flying around in the air, he is busy catching tiny flying
-creatures, such as flies and beetles, and thus keeping the air clear for
-us.
-
-The tail of this bird is another queer thing. It has no soft feathery
-tips like most birds' tails. It ends in sharp spines, like needles.
-These are most useful to brace him against the rough chimney where he
-sleeps. These spines are really the stiff shafts or stems of the
-feathers, sticking out beyond the plumey part.
-
-The chimney swift hangs himself up to sleep. He fastens his sharp claws
-into the rough bricks, and props himself firmly with his spiny tail.
-Even when the young swift is but two weeks old, he crawls out of the
-nest and hangs himself up under it. He seems to like that for a change
-from forever lying in a narrow bracket.
-
-Chimney swifts are social birds. They can't bear to be alone. They are
-almost always seen flying about in small parties, and calling to each
-other as they go, a strange, chattering cry. They are of a sooty color
-suitable to their sooty home, and the pair are alike. Vaux's swift is a
-little smaller and paler than the common chimney swift.
-
-The young swift is longer in his nursery than any bird of his size in
-the United States. He is four weeks old before he ventures out of his
-grimy home, though before that he will come up to the door to be fed.
-
-A late writer in a newspaper tells a little story showing the affection
-of a chimney swift for her little one. The writer had watched all summer
-a party of swifts who lived in one of his chimneys. A month or more
-after he supposed that all had flown away to the South beyond our
-southern boundary, where they spend the winter, he heard the twittering
-of one in the chimney. He took out the fireboard and found there a young
-bird. He was full grown and able to fly, but he was fastened by a
-horsehair to the nest. This had been pulled off by his weight, and lay
-on the hearth, holding him prisoner.
-
-The little fellow seemed to know he was to be helped, for he lay still
-while the man looked to see what was the matter. His mother soon came
-into the chimney with food. She took her place beside the man and
-waited, while he cut the strong hair and set the nestling free.
-
-Then the old bird went to work to teach him to fly. It was an hour or
-more before he learned to use his wings. As soon as he did, the two
-started off on their lonely journey to the far South, to join their
-friends who had been gone so long. How I wish we could know that they
-reached them.
-
-Insects were about gone when this happened, and this swift mother would
-have died if she had stayed, but she would not leave her little one to
-starve.
-
-It is a beautiful thing to see a large flock of swifts go to bed. If
-they all rushed in pell-mell, they might hurt one another. They begin by
-flying around high above the chimney in great circles. As they go around
-they sink lower, and the circles get smaller till it looks like an
-immense whirling funnel. When the birds forming the lower part of the
-funnel reach the top of the chimney, they plunge in. So in a short time
-the whole flock is in and no one hurt.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[21] See Appendix, 20.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-THE GOATSUCKER FAMILY
-
-(_Caprimulgidae_)[22]
-
-
-THESE are queer-looking birds, having their front toes tied together by
-a kind of webbing, and almost no hind toe at all. The mouth, too, is
-almost as odd as the toes. It has a short beak, but is very wide, and it
-opens from ear to ear like the swift's. The plumage is so soft that the
-birds can fly without making the least sound.
-
-The two most common goatsuckers are the whip-poor-will and the
-nighthawk. They are both as large as a robin, and stouter. They are
-dressed in dull brown, and black and white, mottled all over. If you
-just glanced at the two, you might think them alike. But they are not
-marked alike, and all their ways are so different that there is no
-trouble in telling them apart.
-
-
-The WHIP-POOR-WILL has broad white tailmarks, with stripes on the back,
-and a narrow white band across the breast. He comes out only in the
-evening, and he flies low, without making a sound. He rests lengthwise
-of a log or fence, not across it as most birds do. His feet are too
-short to clasp a perch.
-
-On his log or fence the whip-poor-will sits and sings while he waits for
-his supper. You all know his song, his lively "whip-poor-will" over and
-over many times. It is a delightful evening sound, which I love to hear.
-It is said that his notes have been counted, and he has been found to
-repeat them several hundred times without stopping.
-
-When moths or other creatures which fly in the night come along, he
-catches them in his big mouth. But he is not obliged always to wait.
-Sometimes he flies near the ground like a shadow, looking for prey, and
-he often hops awkwardly along the road, for the same purpose. He picks
-up straggling insects, and in the West locusts.
-
-The whip-poor-will mother makes no nest. She finds a little hollow in
-the ground, among leaves or near bushes in the woods, and that's good
-enough for her nestlings. She lays two eggs, speckled and mottled so
-that they look like the ground and leaves around them. She looks almost
-the same herself. You might walk close to her and not see her.
-
-When young whip-poor-wills come out of the egg, they are dressed in
-speckled gray down. They cuddle down quietly by their mother, and the
-whole family is hard to see. When their eyes are shut, they look almost
-exactly like the earth and leaves among which they lie.
-
-If a whip-poor-will nest is disturbed, the mother will pretend to be
-badly hurt. She will tumble about on the ground and cry like the whine
-of a young puppy, trying to coax away the one she fears. If she is too
-much alarmed, she will clasp her young one between her feet and fly away
-with it.
-
-
-Instead of the common whip-poor-will of the Northern and Middle States,
-the South has the CHUCK-WILL'S-WIDOW, who is somewhat larger. The West
-has the POOR-WILL, or the NUTTALL'S WHIP-POOR-WILL, who is rather
-smaller and paler than either. The habits of all are about the same.
-They are called solitary birds. That is, they are not found in parties
-like swallows or crows. They do not sing or call when flying.
-
-These birds are hard to watch because they come out in the dark, and can
-then see so much better than we can. So we know little about their
-ways.
-
-
-The NIGHTHAWK'S looks, and all his ways, are different. He wears the
-same colors that the whip-poor-will does, but they are arranged in
-another way. They are put in bars running across the back and tail, and
-there is a great deal of white on his upper breast. On the wing is a
-large white spot that looks like a hole across it, when you see him
-flying away up in the air. You can always know him by this.
-
-[Illustration: NIGHTHAWK]
-
-Then he does not act like the whip-poor-will. He is a high flyer,
-sailing about over our heads in the afternoon or evening. He is not
-silent on the wing. Now and then he gives a strange sharp cry like
-"peent." He is busy catching flies and mosquitoes as he goes. Sometimes
-you will see him dive head first toward the earth as if he would dash
-himself against it. At the same time he makes a loud sound, like blowing
-into the bunghole of an empty barrel. But before he touches, he turns
-and skims along just above the ground.
-
-The mother nighthawk, like the whip-poor-will, makes no nest. She
-chooses a sunny spot in a pasture or on a hillside to put her eggs.
-Sometimes in the cities, where flies and other things to eat are so
-plentiful, she takes a flat house-roof for her nursery. Many pairs of
-down-covered baby night hawks are brought up over our heads, and we
-do not know it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The family name of Goatsuckers was given to the birds from the foolish
-notion that they took milk from the goats. By watching them, it has been
-found that when they are so busy around the goats or cattle, they are
-really catching the insects which torment them. So they are doing a
-kindness to the beasts, instead of an injury.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[22] See Appendix, 21.
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-THE WOODPECKER FAMILY
-
-(_Picidae_)[23]
-
-
-YOU may generally know a woodpecker the moment you see him on a tree. He
-will--if he follows woodpecker fashions--be clinging to the trunk, or a
-big branch, propped up by his stiff tail, and not perched crosswise like
-most other birds.
-
-There are a good many of this family in the world. We have twenty-four
-species in North America. They differ from other birds in two or three
-ways. First their toes are always in pairs, two turned forward and two
-turned backward, except in one genus, which has but three toes. So they
-can hold on better than anybody else.
-
-Then again the tails of woodpeckers are not like most birds' tails. They
-are strong and stiff, so that they can be used as props to hold the bird
-in the queer position he likes so well.
-
-Oddest of all are the woodpecker tongues. They are round, worm-shaped it
-is called, and except in the genus of sapsuckers, very long. They can be
-pushed out far beyond the end of the beak. That is so that they can
-reach into a deep hole for the insects they eat. They have little barbs
-or sharp points on the tip, to catch their prey, and they are sticky
-besides. The tongue of the sapsucker has a brush at the end and is not
-barbed.
-
-One of the most notable things about a woodpecker is his bill, which he
-uses as a drill and also to drum with.
-
-Woodpeckers are made to take care of the large limbs and trunks of
-trees, to get out from under the bark the grubs which would kill them.
-They are perfectly fitted for the work.
-
-As you learn more about birds and beasts, you will see that every one is
-exactly fitted for his work in life. A worm is as well fitted to be a
-worm as a bird is to be a bird. How this came to be so has long been a
-study of the wise men, and they have not found out all about it yet.
-
-
-The largest of this family that is common is the GOLDEN-WINGED
-WOODPECKER, or FLICKER. He is as large as a pigeon. In the Eastern
-States is the golden-wing, in the West and California the red-shafted,
-who differs merely in the dress.
-
-The gold-winged woodpecker has a brown back with black bars, and a light
-breast with heavy black spots. His wings and tail are yellow on the
-inside. He has a bright red collar on the back of his neck, a heavy
-black crescent on his breast, and black cheek patches or bars running
-down from the corners of his mouth.
-
-The RED-SHAFTED FLICKER has red cheek patches instead of black, and
-omits the red collar altogether. His breast is a little grayer, and the
-wing and tail linings are scarlet. Both flickers have large white spots
-on the back, above the tail, which show very plainly when they fly.
-
-These two varieties of the flicker are found from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific. Their ways of living are the same, and what is said of one will
-do as well for the other.
-
-A flicker hangs himself up to sleep. He takes a good hold of a tree
-trunk, or upright limb, with his grapnel-shaped toes, presses his stiff
-tail against the bark, and hangs there all night. When he flies, he goes
-in great waves, as if he were galloping through the air.
-
-The nest of this woodpecker is a snug little room in a tree trunk, or
-sometimes a telegraph-pole. He usually selects a tree that is dead, or
-partly so, but sometimes he takes a solid one. The little room is cut
-out by the strong, sharp beaks of the pair. The door of this home is
-just a round hole rather high up on the trunk. A passage is cut straight
-in for a little way and then turns down, and there the room is made. It
-has to be of pretty good size, for the bird is fond of a large family.
-Five or six and occasionally more young flickers have been found in a
-nest.
-
-Fashions change in the bird world as well as in the human. Woodpeckers
-more than any others are changing their habits, and improving their
-condition. They have found an easier way to get a home than to chisel it
-out of wood. Nowadays woodpeckers often cut a hole through a board which
-admits them into a garret, a church tower, or the walls of an unused
-building, and make the nest there. Thus they save themselves much labor.
-One even cut out a home in a haystack.
-
-These birds have changed too, it is said, in their notions about eating.
-They do not think it necessary to dig out every mouthful from under tree
-bark. The flicker feeds on the ground. He eats many insects, but mostly
-ants. When insects are scarce, he eats many wild berries--dogwood, black
-alder, poke-berries, and others--and the seeds of weeds.
-
-Young woodpeckers in the nest are fed mostly upon insects. When they get
-big enough to climb up to the door of their snug home, they stick their
-heads out and call for something to eat. Then one can hardly pass
-through the woods without hearing them, for they have good loud voices.
-And of course they are always hungry.
-
-The way they are fed is by regurgitation. That is, the old bird swallows
-the food she gets, and when she wants to feed, she jerks it up again.
-She thrusts her bill far down the little one's throat, as I told you the
-hummingbird does. Then she gives three or four pokes as if she were
-hammering it down. A young flicker does not seem to know how to swallow.
-A lady once picked up a nestling who was hurt, and to get him to eat
-anything she had to poke it down his throat herself.
-
-The gold-winged woodpecker is a lively bird, most interesting to know.
-He makes so many strange noises that I can't tell you half of them, and
-his ways are as queer as his notes. He does not sing much, but he is a
-great drummer. When he finds a tin roof, or eaves gutter that pleases
-him, he will drum on it till he drives the family nearly crazy. He seems
-particularly to delight in waking them all up in the morning.
-
-He can sing, too. I have heard a flicker sing a droll little song, not
-very loud, swinging his body from side to side as he did it.
-
-Another thing this bird can do is dance. Two flickers will stand
-opposite one another and take funny little steps, forward and back, and
-sideways. Then they will touch their bills together and go through
-several graceful figures. This has been seen several times by persons
-whose truthfulness can be relied upon.
-
-
-The RED-HEADED WOODPECKER is another common one of the family,
-especially in the Middle States. He is a little smaller than the
-flicker. No one can mistake this bird, he is so plainly marked. His
-whole head is bright red. The rest of him is black, or bluish black,
-with a large mass of white on the body and wings.
-
-This woodpecker, too, has partly given up getting food from under the
-bark. He takes a good deal on the wing, like a flycatcher. Sometimes he
-goes to the ground for a large insect like a cricket or grasshopper, and
-he is fond of nuts, especially the little three-cornered beech-nut.
-
-The red-head is beginning to store food for winter use, for most
-woodpeckers do not migrate. When beech-nuts are ripe, he gets great
-quantities of them, and packs them away in queer places, where he can
-find them when he wants them.
-
-Some of his nuts the red-head puts in cavities in trees, others in
-knot-holes or under bark that is loose. Many he fits into cracks in the
-bark, and hammers in tight. He has been known to fill the cracks in a
-gate-post, and in railroad ties, and even to poke his nuts between the
-shingles on a roof. Any place where he can wedge a nut in he seems to
-think is a good one.
-
-[Illustration: DOWNY WOODPECKER]
-
-A woodpecker can eat almost anything. Besides insects and nuts, he likes
-wild berries of all kinds--dogwood, cedar, and others that he finds in
-the woods.
-
-The nest of the red-headed woodpecker is usually cut out in the dead top
-or limb of a tree. In prairie lands, where trees are scarce, he contents
-himself with telegraph-poles and fence-posts.
-
-This bird is rather a dainty feeder. He does not swallow his food
-wherever he finds it, as many birds do. He likes a regular dining-table.
-So he takes it to some place on top of a fence-post or an old stump,
-where he has found or made a little hollow. There he puts his nut or
-acorn, picks it to pieces, and eats it in bits.
-
-The young red-head is a good deal like his father, only his head is
-brown instead of red. A queer thing happened to a baby red-head in
-Indiana one summer. He was found on the ground, hopping about in a
-pitiful way, unable to fly. The parents and others of the woodpecker
-tribe were flying about him, much troubled, and trying to help him. But
-this young one had been hurt, or was not yet strong enough to get about.
-He acted as if he were half paralyzed, and he was wholly helpless. Once
-while the little bird was hobbling about and calling for something to
-eat, and no one was there to feed him, a robin happened to notice him.
-He took pity on the hungry baby, and brought him a nice worm, which he
-took very gladly.
-
-But still more strange was the way the family cat acted toward the
-little stranger. When she saw him on the ground, she started for him. No
-doubt she meant to catch him, for she was a great bird hunter. When she
-got almost up to the little fellow, she seemed suddenly to notice that
-he was a baby, and helpless. At once her manner changed. She went up to
-him, and actually played with him in the gentlest way, not hurting him
-in the least. She did this several times before the bird got strong
-enough to fly. This is a true story.
-
-
-The CALIFORNIAN WOODPECKER takes the place of the red-head in
-California. He is most interesting because of one habit which gives him
-the common name of "carpenter woodpecker." This habit is of storing
-sweet acorns for winter use.
-
-Other birds store acorns, but this bird has found out a new way. He
-drills a hole in the bark of a tree for each acorn by itself. It is
-generally a soft pine or cedar, and sometimes thousands of acorns are
-put in one tree. Often a trunk will be filled from near the ground up
-forty feet. The acorns are driven in point first, and so tightly that
-they have to be cut out with a knife. When a tree is filled, it is
-carefully guarded till they are needed.
-
-Many people think they lay up these acorns for the worms that sometimes
-come into them. But Mr. John Muir, who lives right there, and knows them
-as well as anybody in the world, says the birds eat the sound acorns
-themselves. Sometimes, when food is scarce, Indians go to these trees
-and steal the poor birds' store. They have to chop the acorns out with
-hatchets. They often take a bushel from one tree.
-
-These birds are more social than most woodpeckers. Often a party of them
-will be seen together. In his flight and his ways of eating this bird is
-like the red-headed woodpecker. Like him also, he is fond of clinging to
-a dead limb, and drumming, hours at a time.
-
-But in looks the Californian and the red-headed woodpeckers are very
-different. The Western bird has only a cap of bright red. His back is
-glossy blue-black, and he has the same color on the breast. His other
-under parts are white, and he has a white patch on the wings, and
-another just above the tail.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The smallest of our woodpeckers is the Downy Woodpecker, who is not much
-bigger than an English sparrow. The picture shows two of these birds. In
-"The First Book of Birds" there is a picture of a flicker at his
-nest-hole.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[23] See Appendix, 22.
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-THE KINGFISHER FAMILY
-
-(_Alcedinidae_)[24]
-
-
-MOST of the Kingfisher family belong to the tropics, but we have one who
-is found all over the United States. This is the BELTED KINGFISHER.
-
-[Illustration: BELTED KINGFISHER]
-
-The belted kingfisher is large and rather chunky. He is dark blue above
-and white below, with a bluish band across the breast. He has a fine
-crest and a big head, and he sits up straight as a hawk.
-
-The tail of the kingfisher is short, and square at the end. His plumage
-is thick and oily, so that it does not hold wet. This is very important
-to him in the way he gets his food, for he is an expert fisherman. He
-lives alone, or with his mate, near the water,--a lake, or pond, or
-small stream.
-
-This bird's way of getting fish is to dive for them. You may have seen
-him splash into the water out of sight, and in a moment come up with
-a small fish in his beak. Then he goes back to his perch and beats the
-fish to death, before he swallows it. He swallows it whole and head
-first, because the fins might stick in his throat if he took it tail
-first. After a while he throws up a little ball of the bones, scales,
-and skin of the fish he has eaten. It is said that the kingfisher can
-take a very large fish. One was shot who had swallowed a fish so long
-that the tail stuck out of his mouth, and could not get down.
-
-The nest of the kingfisher is in the bank of a river or lake. The birds
-first cut a passage or hallway. Sometimes this is only four feet long,
-and straight. But when stones or roots are in the way, it will be much
-longer and have many turns. At the end of this passage is the kingfisher
-nursery. This is a round room nearly a foot across, with a roof rounded
-up over it. It is a little higher than the passageway so that water will
-not run into it.
-
-Sometimes it takes the birds two or three weeks to make one of these
-nests, as we might expect when we think they have only beaks and feet to
-work with. Usually it does not take so long. If the pair are not
-disturbed, they will use the same nest year after year. Sometimes the
-bed for the nestlings is of dry grass. One was found in which the bed
-was entirely of the bones and scales of fish.
-
-Mr. Baily has told us about a family of kingfisher little folk whom he
-studied and photographed. He dug down to the nest from above, and was
-careful not to hurt them and to put them back safely. First Mr. Baily
-took a picture of them when two days old. They were queer-looking
-objects, with eyes not open, and not a feather to their backs. They were
-not so young but that they had one notion in their little round heads.
-That was to cuddle up close together. They were not used to much room in
-their dark cradle.
-
-When Mr. Baily laid them out on the ground, they at once crawled up
-together and made themselves into a sort of ball. They put their bare
-wings and their bills over one another, and held on so that one could
-not be moved without the others. After they had sat for their picture
-they were carefully put back, and the nest was covered up again.
-
-When the nestlings were nine days old, the nest was opened again, and
-another picture taken. The little ones had grown a good deal in these
-few days. Their eyes were open, and they were fast getting their feather
-coats on. But they were just as fond of being close together as before.
-
-After this the birds were left in their home till they were twenty-three
-days old, and it seemed about time for them to come out. When the nest
-was opened this time, it was found that the family had moved. The old
-room was filled up with earth, and a new one made farther up. No doubt
-the old birds thought the man too curious about their babies. The young
-birds were ready to fly, and two of them did take to their wings when
-they came to daylight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a very old fable about the kingfisher, who was called the
-halcyon. It is told in the first book that was ever written about birds
-(so far as I know). The author was Aristotle, a Greek who lived three
-hundred years before Christ. The story is, that the bird builds a nest
-that floats on the sea, and for seven days before and seven days after
-the shortest winter day, the sea stays calm, so that the nest may not be
-hurt. During the first seven days she builds her nest, and in the second
-seven she hatches out the young. These fourteen days were called halcyon
-days. You may find more about this curious story in the encyclopaedias.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[24] See Appendix, 23.
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-THE CUCKOO FAMILY
-
-(_Cuculidae_)[25]
-
-
-MOST of the cuckoo family live in a hotter climate than ours, but we
-have a few of them. They are beautiful birds, with some peculiar ways.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO]
-
-Cuckoos are rather slim in form, with very long tails, and bills a
-little curved. Their toes are divided like woodpeckers' toes, two turned
-forward and two back. In the Eastern States we have but two, the
-yellow-billed and the black-billed. Best known in the East is the
-YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO, and in California the Western Yellow-billed, or
-California, Cuckoo.
-
-This bird has several names. In some places he is called the rain crow,
-and in other places the wood pigeon; but of course he is neither a crow
-nor a pigeon. He is a graceful bird, with plumage like satin. He is a
-soft brown above and white below, but he is so shy that he is not so
-often seen as heard. His call or song is a loud, yet not harsh
-"kuk-kuk-kuk" many times repeated. Sometimes it begins slow and grows
-faster till the notes run into each other, and then grows slow again,
-ending in a sort of "cow-cow-cow;" but it does not always do so.
-
-The cuckoo does not manage her nursery affairs as other birds do. Most
-birds lay an egg a day, or every other day, so that they hatch about the
-same time; but this bird doesn't mind if several days come between. Thus
-it happens that one or more little cuckoos hatch out before the rest are
-ready, and it is common to find little ones of several ages in the same
-nest. There may be one nearly grown, another just beginning to get
-feathers, and a third one not yet out of the egg.
-
-There is another droll thing that may be found in a cuckoo's nest. When
-the feathers begin to grow out on young birds, they come wrapped in
-little sheaths. In most cases these sheaths burst open and the feathers
-show, when they are a little way out. But in this family it is
-different. The sheath does not open, says Mr. Dugmore, till the feathers
-have grown their full length. Till that happens, the youngster looks as
-if he were stuck all over with white pins on his black body.
-
-You have heard, or read, that the cuckoo lays eggs in other birds'
-nests, and leaves her young to be brought up by others. Do not forget
-that the bird who does that is the European cuckoo--not ours. Our
-cuckoos build nests, though very poor ones, sometimes hardly more than a
-platform of sticks.
-
-This bird is useful to us, for he eats some of our most troublesome
-insects,--such as tent caterpillars, which few birds like to eat because
-they are so hairy, and other insects with spines that are poisonous, and
-so generally avoided.
-
-The cuckoo is graceful in flight. He goes swiftly, without noise, and
-seems to glide through the thickest foliage with ease.
-
-I once found a young bird tumbling about on the ground. He was trying to
-fly, but was not able to go much more than a foot at a time. He was
-giving strange calls, which were answered from the woods beside the road
-by a low tapping sound. I thought of course the little one was a
-woodpecker and his mother was doing the knocking. It was so dark I could
-not see him well. After some trouble I caught him and was going to take
-a good look at him to see who he was before I let him go. As I grasped
-him he gave a shriek, and out from the thick trees popped a cuckoo. She
-alighted on a low branch outside and gave such a cry of distress that I
-knew at once it was her baby I held in my hand.
-
-I suppose the poor mother thought I wanted to carry the youngster off. I
-couldn't bear to have a bird think that for a minute; so I opened my
-hands and away he went, half flying, half scrambling up the road, while
-the mother slipped back into the woods. In a moment she began again her
-hollow-sounding calls, which I had thought were woodpecker tappings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[25] See Appendix, 24.
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-THE OWL FAMILY
-
-(_Bubonidae_)[26]
-
-
-OWLS differ from all other birds in having eyes that look forward like
-ours. They have also a broad face, which is made to look even wider by
-the feathers which stand out around the eyes.
-
-Owls cannot turn their eyes in the sockets, so they have to turn the
-whole head to see to one side. Many of them have tufts of feathers like
-horns, which they can stand up or lay down as they choose. These are
-called horned owls. An owl's legs are covered with feathers, sometimes
-down to the toes. The whole plumage of this bird is soft and fluffy, so
-that he can fly without making any noise. This is important to him, for
-he lives mostly on mice, and he never could catch one if he made much
-noise getting about.
-
-The owl's mate looks like him, and--what is unusual among birds--she is
-larger than he. Because they come out in the evening, when we cannot
-see them well, we know very little of their ways. They are more often
-heard than seen. Their voices are generally mournful, but that is no
-reason why they should be feared.
-
-All birds have control over some of their feathers, that is, they can
-make them stand up or lie down as they choose. But owls have more than
-any other bird. An owl can alter his shape or size so that he will look
-like another bird.
-
-Mr. Bolles says that a large owl can change from a mass of bristling
-feathers a yard wide, to a slim, sleek brown post only a few inches
-wide. When he does this, one cannot see him, though he may be in plain
-sight. His colors blend with a tree trunk, or stump, and he can stand
-without stirring for an hour, and likes to do it.
-
-Mr. Bolles had owls in the house, and watched them closely. He has told
-us some curious things about their ways. He says that when one steps
-daintily across the floor, his feathers tuck themselves up as a lady
-holds up her gown.
-
-This moving of the feathers sometimes looks very droll. When eating, the
-feathers around the mouth, which might get soiled, draw back out of the
-way. And when an owl wants to hide his food, he stands over it, and the
-feathers droop down like a curtain to screen it from view. When Mrs.
-Bolles wanted to sketch an owl, he kept changing his shape all the time,
-though he did not seem to move at all.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Another man who had a pet owl says that the bird would stand before him
-and throw back his breast feathers each side, just as a man throws open
-his coat.
-
-The owlets come out of the egg dressed in soft, fluffy down. In some of
-the family it is gray, in others it is snowy white. They are carefully
-fed and reared by their loving parents.
-
-A funny story is told by a man who wanted to see what was in an owl's
-nest. He lifted the mother bird out, and to his surprise the whole
-family came out with her. She held on to one little one, and each one
-held on to the next, and so he had the whole owl family in a cluster,
-like a bunch of grapes.
-
-
-The SCREECH OWL is the best known of this family. He is found, under
-slightly different forms, all over our country. In Florida he is smaller
-and darker than in the Middle States. In California he is larger and
-grayer, and in the Rocky Mountains somewhat lighter. But he acts in
-about the same way, wherever he lives.
-
-In the East the screech owl is found in two colors. Some have reddish
-feathers, others have gray. The wise men have not yet found any
-reason for this difference.
-
-The screech owl is badly named, for his song is not a screech. It is a
-sort of trembling sound, and in some places he is called the "shivering
-owl," which is a much better name for him than screech owl. If one does
-not know who makes it, it is rather a weird song in the dark; but if one
-knows the pretty gray bird, it is sweet and pleasing.
-
-The bird comes out before it is quite pitch dark. He may often be seen
-against the sky, standing on a branch, bowing and swaying back and
-forth, while he utters strange notes of many kinds. He has plenty to say
-for himself. But you must keep as still as a mouse if you want to see
-him. If he can see to catch a mouse in the dark, you may be sure he can
-see you.
-
-Generally the screech owl makes a nest in a hollow tree or a deserted
-woodpecker nest, and comes out only at night. What he likes best to eat
-is mice, and mice too come out at night. The way he eats is curious, as
-I told you in "The First Book of Birds."
-
-A few years ago a screech owl went through a broken window into the
-attic of a house in New Jersey, and lived there all winter. The family
-were bird-lovers, so they let her stay. She liked it so well that the
-next spring she made her nest there and hatched out three little owls.
-The little ones were not at all afraid of people, and a son of the
-family made many photographs of them.
-
-After the owlets were grown, the whole family disappeared, and lived out
-of doors the rest of the summer. But when cold weather came, the old
-birds came back and stayed all winter again. They have made their home
-in that attic, and reared a brood every spring since. They are always
-very social among themselves. They talk and sing, and make many sorts of
-noises.
-
-
-One of the queerest of the owl family is the little BURROWING OWL of the
-West. The Florida Burrowing Owl, found in Florida, differs only a little
-from the Western bird. The burrowing owl is a comical-looking fellow,
-only about as large as a robin. He has very long legs for an owl, and is
-dressed in grayish brown.
-
-This bird is said to have very polite manners. In some places he is
-called the "how-do-you-do owl." He is always bowing, and turning from
-side to side, and seems to be greeting you as you come near him.
-
-The burrowing owl likes a comfortable home underground, out of the way
-of enemies. In the West, where he lives, prairie dogs are plentiful,
-and they are always digging out passages and rooms, more than they can
-use. So the owl has no trouble in finding empty quarters to live in.
-
-But in California, and places where are none of the digging dogs, the
-little owl rooms with some of the ground squirrels that burrow there. He
-must have an underground home in that land where trees are scarce, and
-he has no fancy for digging. Even if he wanted to dig, his feet are not
-fitted for it like the feet of the little beasts.
-
-The burrowing owl has no trouble in taking a house where he finds one to
-suit him, for he's a savage little fellow. He can kill squirrels and
-prairie dogs much bigger than himself, and even rattlesnakes, which take
-lodgings in the prairie dog houses also. He feeds upon all these
-creatures. He eats also crickets, scorpions, and many troublesome
-insects. This makes him valuable to farmers, for nearly all these
-creatures destroy his crops.
-
-Remember, too, that birds have great appetites; as I have told you, they
-eat more than their own weight every day. In that way they dispose of
-enormous numbers of pests. It almost seems as if a bird were a sort of
-eating machine, made on purpose to work for us. We should never forget
-this.
-
-This bird, like most others, makes many different sounds. His song is a
-soft "coo-oo," something like that of a mourning dove. When a stranger
-comes to his home and he is there, he gives a rattle which sounds like a
-rattlesnake. This scares people, and perhaps animals, away, for no one
-wants to meet a rattlesnake in a dark hole. I wonder if the bird learned
-this trick living in the same house with the snake.
-
-The Department of Agriculture has proved owls to be among the most
-useful of birds. Their food is almost entirely of hurtful creatures, and
-they come out at night when other birds are asleep and are ready to hunt
-the pests which do the same.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[26] See Appendix, 25.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-THE BARN OWL FAMILY
-
-(_Strigidae_)[27]
-
-
-THIS is a small family of which we have but one member in America, the
-AMERICAN BARN OWL. He is found all over the country, as far north as
-southern New England, but he is one of the shyest of birds. He comes out
-only at night, and hides so well in the day that he is not often seen,
-even where he is common. So very little is known of his ways.
-
-When he does happen to come out, and any one sees him, a great deal is
-said about him. For he is a very odd-looking fellow indeed. He is all in
-gray and white, clouded and speckled and barred, and his face is the
-strangest of bird faces. It is three-cornered, and looks more like a
-monkey's than a bird's. If he shows this face in the daylight, he is
-generally caught or shot, and the newspapers make a great fuss about
-him. Some one says he looks like a toothless little old woman, with a
-hooked nose.
-
-Happily for the barn owl, he does not often come out. He loves quiet
-more than anything. He seeks a hidden, safe place, not only for a nest,
-but to spend his days in. He is almost the only bird who may be said to
-live in a home.
-
-When house hunting, this bird will take a snug cavity in a tree, or an
-empty building. He does not despise an old mining shaft, or a burrow in
-the ground. He delights in a church steeple or a barn. Almost any place
-that is quiet and out of sight of the world will suit him.
-
-All day the barn owl stays at home. But in the evening he comes out for
-his dinner, and then there is havoc among the small animals. Rats,
-ground squirrels, mice, bats, small snakes, grasshoppers, and almost
-anything else that is eatable are welcome to him. He should be protected
-because he is so useful.
-
-This bird is an amiable fellow too. He has been known to live pleasantly
-in a church tower with pigeons, whom he could easily kill to eat if he
-wished. He is a hearty eater himself, besides feeding a family of five
-or six little fuzzy white owlets great quantities of food.
-
-One of these owls has lived for years in a tower of the Smithsonian
-Institution in Washington. In the Zoological Collection of that city,
-there was, not long ago, another of the family alive. Wishing to have
-more of them in the Zoo, some one watched the nest of the tower bird.
-When her little family of seven was about ready to fly, he took them
-away, and gave them to their caged relative. She promptly adopted the
-whole party, and reared them with the greatest care. No doubt she was
-glad to have something to do. Life in a cage must be very tiresome for
-wild birds and beasts.
-
-Mr. Reed of Philadelphia has told us how a pet barn owl threw up the
-castings. These, you know, are the bones and skin of mice and other
-creatures which are thrown up awhile after eating. He would bow his head
-and shake it very hard. Then raise it and jerk out the little ball.
-
-This bird was very tame. The place where he liked best to sit was on the
-arm or shoulder of his master. If the man wanted to do anything except
-play with him, he had to get a stuffed bird to amuse the living one. It
-was like a doll for a baby girl. When the owl was not perfectly
-comfortable, he kept up a constant cry, so his master had to keep him
-well entertained and fed.
-
-The note of the barn owl is a wild screech. One is sometimes heard
-making this sound, but he is never heard flying, for, like other owls,
-he is dressed in soft feathers that make no rustle.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[27] See Appendix, 26.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-THE HAWK AND EAGLE FAMILY
-
-(_Falconidae_)[28]
-
-
-THIS is a family of birds of prey. That is, birds who live entirely on
-living animals, which they hunt and catch for themselves. Owls are also
-birds of prey, but they do their hunting by night, while this family
-work by day.
-
-[Illustration: SPARROW HAWK]
-
-Like all birds, hawks are well fitted for what they have to do. They
-have long wings, so that they can fly swiftly and long at a time, to
-follow up the prey. They have sharp, curved claws, made for grasping and
-holding things. Their hooked beak is the best kind for cutting and
-tearing meat.
-
-Most of these birds work for us the whole time, as do the owls. For they
-eat the same destructive animals, and they eat an enormous number. Yet
-we have a foolish prejudice against them, because two or three of them
-sometimes take poultry and game birds. Even when these birds do take
-our poultry and game birds, some good is done. For they naturally catch
-the weak ones who are not able to get out of their way. And it is better
-for the whole race of these birds that the weak ones should not live. It
-leaves the rest stronger, and better able to make their way in the
-world.
-
-This family is found all over the world. It includes birds of all sizes,
-from one as small as a sparrow to one who spreads his wings ten feet. In
-our country we have neither the smallest nor the largest. Of those you
-are likely to see, the least is the American Sparrow Hawk, who is not
-much larger than a robin, and the greatest is the Bald Eagle, who is
-sometimes a yard from the tip of his beak to the end of his tail.
-
-Hawks have wonderful eyes like a telescope and microscope in one, as I
-have told you in "The First Book of Birds." In eating without knife and
-fork, they often swallow food whole and throw up castings like the owls.
-
-In catching their prey these birds use their feet instead of their
-beaks. Even those who hunt grasshoppers and crickets seize them in their
-claws. Their feet are quite as useful as hands. In them they carry
-material for the nest as well as food for the little ones. The claws are
-powerful weapons of war, too. A hawk who is ready to fight throws
-himself on his back and presents his claws to the enemy. Few people
-would like to be grappled by those terrible claws.
-
-Hawks and eagles have wonderful wing power. Some of them can stay far up
-in the air an hour at a time. They go up in great circles with wings
-held stiffly out and not beating, till out of sight. Men have not yet
-been able to see quite how it is done. It is probably by using the wings
-as sailors use their sails, and making the wind carry them.
-
-
-The one of this family I shall tell you about is the FISH HAWK, or
-AMERICAN OSPREY, because he is found all over the United States. He is
-one of those which you will be most likely to see, and want to know
-about.
-
-The osprey is a large bird, about two feet long. He is dressed in
-chocolate brown, with white breast and white tips to many of his
-feathers. His head feathers are long, and lie back on his neck, giving a
-peculiar shape to the head, by which you may know him at once. These
-feathers too are white, so that as he flies over he looks as if he were
-bald. He has feet marvelously fitted to hold slippery fish. The talons
-are sharp, and the toes long, and rough on the under side, so that
-nothing can get away from them.
-
-The fish hawk is a social bird and fond of his home. Though he migrates,
-he comes back to the old place, year after year. He likes the top of a
-stout tree to build in. It needs to be stout, for he makes a very big
-nest, and adds to it every season. It generally kills the tree, if it is
-not dead when he begins. If there are no trees to be had, or if there
-are too many birds for the trees at hand, some of them will nest on the
-ground, for they like to keep near their friends. The nest is made of
-sticks and all the rubbish the birds can collect. Such things are found
-as an old broom, a boy's sail-boat, a rag doll, and others as absurd.
-
-The young fish hawk is a pretty little fellow in white down. He is three
-or four weeks in the egg, and a long time in the nest, and is helpless a
-good deal longer. He is fed on fish like his parents. For this bird
-deserves his name; he is a fisherman, and always takes his food from the
-water. Fortunately he usually selects the poorer kinds of fish, which
-men do not care to eat, and so he is not called an enemy by the
-fishermen.
-
-But the hard-working osprey has an enemy, who makes it his business to
-rob him. The way the fish hawk gets his food is to dive for it. He
-hovers over the water till he sees a fish near the surface that suits
-him. Then he closes his wings and dives like a shot. He plunges in often
-over his head, and seizes the fish in his claws or talons. Then he
-rises, and shaking off the water flies toward his family, with their
-dinner.
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN OSPREY OR FISH HAWK]
-
-But then appears the robber, the bald eagle, I'm sorry to say, who
-prefers stealing his food to hunting for himself. He rushes furiously at
-the fish hawk, who is obliged to drop his load to defend himself. Then
-the eagle seizes it, often before it reaches the ground, and flies off,
-while the osprey goes back to his fishing.
-
-But the osprey is learning something, like the rest of the birds. On the
-shore of New Jersey there is a place where men fish with great nets, and
-bring in hundreds of fish every day. The birds have noted how much
-better men are at their trade of fishing than they are. So they have
-thought out an easier way to get food than to dive for it. Perhaps they
-got the hint from the eagle.
-
-Wherever the fish hawks got the idea, it is now the common custom for
-them to sit on the poles that hold the net and wait. When it is drawn up
-filled with flopping fish, each bird dives down and secures one for
-himself. And he takes time to choose, too. If there is one of a kind
-he particularly likes, he goes for that one.
-
-Fish hawks, like other birds, are very fond of their little ones. A
-gentleman who had been traveling in the West told me this little story.
-He, with a party who were wandering over a wild part of the country,
-accidentally set fire to a bit of woods on the shore of Lake Superior.
-On one of the trees was a fish hawk's nest with young birds. As soon as
-the smoke began to spread, the old birds grew uneasy, and circled about
-their tree, going often to the nest.
-
-The men who had done the mischief, and who had then taken to their boat,
-were noting the spread of the fire. They watched the birds to see what
-they would do. When the fire at last reached their tree, the loving
-parents turned with one accord, plunged down into the nest, and all
-perished together. They could easily have saved themselves, but they
-could not desert their nestlings.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[28] See Appendix, 27.
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-THE SCAVENGER FAMILY
-
-(_Cathartidae_)[29]
-
-
-THIS is one of the most useful of bird families. But it is not very
-pleasant to meet, for the work it has to do makes it rather repulsive to
-us.
-
-The vultures are scavengers. They dispose of vast quantities of carrion
-and other offensive matter. In doing this they make it possible for
-people to live in places where they could not live without the service
-of these birds.
-
-
-The common vulture in the United States is the TURKEY VULTURE, or TURKEY
-BUZZARD. He is a large bird, with head and neck bare of feathers. In
-shape and size he is a good deal like a turkey. He is a familiar bird
-all over the country, except in New England and other northern parts,
-and is usually seen soaring about in the air, looking for food.
-Beautiful and graceful he looks away up against the sky. He sails
-around as if he weighed nothing, with wing feathers spread at the tip
-like fingers. But he is not so pretty when he comes to the ground, for
-he is very clumsy and awkward in getting about.
-
-The turkey buzzard nests almost anywhere; he is not at all
-particular--on the ground, in a hollow stump, or tree. The young are
-comfortably dressed in white down, but they are not pretty. They are as
-awkward as their parents, and have a way of hanging their heads as if
-they were ashamed of themselves. That is not the reason, however; their
-work is something we could not do without. It is because they are too
-weak to hold themselves up.
-
-I once saw a funny sight. A party of eighteen or twenty great buzzards
-had come to the ground to get their dinner. They were all very busily
-engaged just the other side of a fence, so that I could not see them at
-their feast.
-
-Suddenly a mockingbird that I was watching flew over and alighted on the
-fence. He stood there a minute, looking sharply down at them, and
-flirting his tail in a saucy way. All at once, to my great surprise, he
-gave a loud cry and flung himself down right among the great birds.
-
-I was frightened. I thought one peck from one of their strong beaks
-would kill the little fellow. But instead of that, the whole party of
-buzzards flew up in a panic, as if they were afraid of him. Then the
-mockingbird, who looked like a midget beside them, hopped back upon the
-fence, and burst into a loud song of victory. He knew the turkey buzzard
-better than I did. No one likes to get very near this bird, so very
-little is known about his ways.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[29] See Appendix, 28.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX
-
-CHARACTERS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN REPRESENTATIVES OF THE FAMILIES
-MENTIONED IN THIS BOOK
-
-
- NOTE.--_These characters, though correct, are
- untechnically given, and are such as may be observed
- on the "bird in the bush" while the added hints on
- habits, etc., will be found helpful in
- identification._
-
-
-1. Turdidae: THRUSHES.
-
-Medium size; bill shorter than head, straight or nearly so; bristles
-(hair-like feathers) at corner of mouth; wings rather pointed, and
-longer than tail; tail-feathers wider towards the end, the whole
-somewhat fan-shaped. Young in first feathers speckled and streaked, very
-different from the adults. Sexes nearly alike (except robin, varied
-thrush, and bluebird). (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects, earthworms, and sometimes fruit.
-
-These birds are all singers and build rude nests. Found usually on the
-lower part of trees in the woods (except robin and bluebird) or on the
-ground, where they get most of their food.
-
-
-2. Sylviidae: KINGLETS and GNATCATCHERS.
-
-This family is divided into two subfamilies.
-
-KINGLETS: Very small; bill slender, much shorter than head, straight to
-near tip, then slightly curved; bristles at corner of mouth; wings
-longer than tail; tail slightly forked, feathers pointed; legs long;
-claws much curved. Young without markings on head. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects.
-
-Very small, active, musical birds, usually found flitting about in
-trees.
-
-GNATCATCHERS: Very small and slim; bill slender and short, nearly as
-long as head, notched at tip; bristles at corner of mouth; wings shorter
-than tail and rounded; tail long and moderately graduated, feathers
-rounded; legs rather long; toes small. (Ridgway.)
-
-Active, beautiful nest builders, found in the tops of trees.
-Insectivorous.
-
-
-3. Paridae: NUTHATCHES, TITMICE, etc.
-
-This family is divided into three subfamilies.
-
-NUTHATCHES: Smaller than English sparrow; bill sharp, pointed, higher
-than wide, about as long as head; bristles over nostrils; wings pointed;
-tail very short, nearly even, feathers soft; legs stout. (Ridgway.)
-
-Parents nearly alike; food, insects.
-
-Found on the trunks and large limbs of trees.
-
-TITMICE: Usually smaller than English sparrow; bill stout, conical,
-shorter than head; nasal feathers turned forward; tail longer than wing.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Parents alike, and young the same. No noticeable change
-of plumage with season.
-
-WREN-TITS and BUSH-TITS: Very small; bill short and conical; tail
-rounded. Sexes alike.
-
-
-4. Certhiidae: CREEPERS.
-
-Smaller than English sparrow; bill slender and curved downward; wings
-rather pointed, long as tail; tail graduated, stiff, with long,
-sharp-pointed feathers; claws long and strongly curved. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes alike, and young the same. Found circling tree
-trunks.
-
-
-5. Troglodytidae: WRENS and MOCKING THRUSHES.
-
-This family is divided into two subfamilies.
-
-WRENS: Smaller than English sparrow; bill slender, sometimes long and
-arched; no bristles at corner of mouth; wings rounded; tail usually held
-up. (Ridgway.)
-
-Parents and young alike. Food: insects. Singers. Found near the ground.
-
-MOCKING THRUSHES: Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, mostly
-rather long; bristles at corner of mouth; wings rounded; tail longer
-than wings; appear like thrushes; fine singers. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes nearly alike. Food, insects and fruit. Some of them found in bushy
-borders of woods, some about gardens and houses, and others in various
-places.
-
-
-6. Cinclidae: DIPPERS.
-
-Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, shorter than head; wings
-short, stiff and rounded; tail shorter than wings, soft and square;
-claws strongly curved; plumage soft and compact; body stout, thickset.
-Sexes alike. (Coues.)
-
-Food: water insects and larvae. Found in and about the brooks of the
-Rocky Mountains and other mountains of the West.
-
-
-7. Motacillidae: WAGTAILS and PIPITS.
-
-Larger than English sparrow; bill slender, cone shaped, nearly as high
-as wide, at base; short bristles at corner of mouth; wings rather long
-and pointed; tail narrow and slightly forked; legs rather long; hind
-claw very long, sharp and slightly curved. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes alike. Food: insects. Found on the ground, where they walk, and
-wag their tails.
-
-
-8. Mniotiltidae: WARBLERS.
-
-It is almost impossible to characterize this family, there are so many
-varieties. With few exceptions they are very small and beautifully
-colored birds, sexes unlike, and changes of plumage with age and season.
-Some are found in the tops of trees, some on bushes, and some on the
-ground. Food: insects. (Coues.)
-
-
-9. Vireonidae: VIREOS.
-
-Generally smaller than an English sparrow, and more slender; bill
-notched in both mandibles; tail rather short, nearly even, of narrow
-feathers; front toes more or less united. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Constant singers. Sexes alike and young the same, without
-spots or streaks. Some found in trees in the woods, and others about
-towns where English sparrows are not too numerous.
-
-
-10. Laniidae: SHRIKES.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill powerful, tip hooked and notched;
-wings short, rounded; tail long and much graduated. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects, small mammals, and sometimes birds. Sexes alike, and
-young the same. Found on outside of low trees, fences, telegraph wires,
-and peaks of roofs.
-
-
-11. Ampelidae: WAXWINGS, etc.
-
-Somewhat larger than an English sparrow; bill short, broad and rather
-flat; head with pointed crest; wings long and pointed; tail short,
-narrow, even; legs of moderate length. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects and fruit. Sexes usually alike. Found in trees in woods
-and in shade and orchard trees.
-
-
-12. Hirundinidae: SWALLOWS.
-
-About the size of an English, sparrow; bill short, flat, and very broad
-at the head; mouth opens back nearly to the eyes; wings long and scythe
-shaped; tail forked; legs short; feet weak; plumage compact and usually
-lustrous. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes usually alike, and young a little different. Found
-in flocks, in the air, on roofs or fences or telegraph wires, sometimes
-on trees.
-
-
-13. Tanagridae: TANAGERS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill conical, notched, bristles; wings
-longer than tail; tail of moderate length, somewhat notched; legs rather
-short. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes unlike. Found on trees in the woods.
-
-
-14. Fringillidae: FINCHES.
-
-Mostly about the size of an English sparrow, some smaller, some larger;
-bill short, high, and strong, turned down at the back corner; wings and
-tail variable. (Ridgway.)
-
-Seed and insect eaters. Found everywhere--on trees, bushes, on ground,
-in woods, fields, and about houses.
-
-
-15. Icteridae: BLACKBIRDS, ORIOLES, etc.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill straight or gently curved; mouth
-turned down at corners; tail rather long and rounded; legs rather short.
-Includes birds of very different habits. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: seeds and insects. Sexes generally unlike. Found everywhere, on
-trees, in marshes, in woods. Many gregarious, found in flocks, some
-except in nesting season, and others all the year round.
-
-
-16. Corvidae: CROWS and JAYS.
-
-Larger than a robin. There are two subfamilies.
-
-CROWS: Bill longer than head; wings long and pointed; tail rather short
-and even.
-
-JAYS: Bill shorter than head; wings short and rounded. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: almost everything--seeds, fruit, sometimes eggs and young birds.
-Found in woody places.
-
-
-17. Alaudidae: LARKS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill short, conical, frontal feathers
-extend along the side; wings pointed; claw on hind toe very long and
-nearly straight. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes nearly alike. Found on ground in fields and roads.
-
-
-18. Tyrannidae: FLYCATCHERS.
-
-Mostly larger than an English sparrow; bill broad, flattened, curved
-downward at end, and notched at tip; bristles along the gape; wings and
-tail variable. (Ridgway.)
-
-Entirely insectivorous. Found in woods and fields and about houses.
-
-
-19. Trochilidae: HUMMINGBIRDS.
-
-Our smallest birds; bill slender, sharp, and straight, usually longer
-than head; wings long and pointed; legs short; feet small and weak;
-claws curved and sharp. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: tiny insects and the honey of flowers. Sexes unlike. Found about
-flowers.
-
-
-20. Micropodidae: SWIFTS.
-
-About the size of an English sparrow; bill very small, triangular, much
-broader than high, without bristles; wings long and pointed; legs short;
-feet weak; tail very short, ending in stiff spines; plumage compact.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Food: entirely insects. Sexes alike. Found in the air or inside chimneys
-or hollow trees.
-
-
-21. Caprimulgidae: GOATSUCKERS.
-
-Larger than a robin; bill very short; gape enormously long and wide;
-mouth open to behind the eyes; wings long; plumage soft. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: insects. Sexes nearly alike. One species found in the edge of
-woods, and another species about towns.
-
-
-22. Picidae: WOODPECKERS.
-
-Larger than an English sparrow; bill usually straight, pointed or
-chisel-shaped at tip; tongue extensile and except in one species barbed
-at point; tail stiff and feathers pointed at tip for a prop; toes,
-except in three-toed species, two forward and two backward for climbing.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Insectivorous. Sexes unlike. Found on trees (except one species) in
-woods or orchards.
-
-
-23. Alcedinidae: KINGFISHERS.
-
-Usually larger than a robin; bill long and straight; tongue small; head
-large, crested; wings short; legs small; outer and middle toe united
-half their length. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: fishes. Sexes slightly unlike. Found by water.
-
-
-24. Cuculidae: CUCKOOS.
-
-Larger than a robin; bill narrow and high, rather long and curved
-downward; wings long; tail long, soft, and rounded; toes in pairs.
-(Ridgway.)
-
-Insectivorous. Sexes alike. Found on trees.
-
-
-25. Bubonidae: OWLS.
-
-Mostly larger than a robin, a few smaller; bill hooked; eyes directed
-forward and surrounded by radiating feathers; plumage soft and lax;
-feathers beside forehead often stand up like ear tufts; legs usually
-feathered; feet sometimes feathered. (Ridgway.)
-
-Sexes alike. Flesh eaters. Usually nocturnal. Most species found in
-holes in trees or old buildings.
-
-
-26. Strigidae: BARN OWLS.
-
-Much larger than a robin; bill hooked; eyes very small;
-triangular-shaped eye disk; tail emarginate; claws sharp and strong;
-very downy plumage. (Ridgway).
-
-Food: mice and other small mammals. Sexes alike. Exclusively nocturnal.
-Found in barns and deserted buildings.
-
-
-27. Falconidae: HAWKS AND EAGLES.
-
-(There are several subfamilies.)
-
-Mostly very large birds; bill strongly hooked; eyes directed sideways;
-eyelids with lashes; toes never feathered. (Ridgway.)
-
-Carnivorous and insectivorous. Sexes usually alike, but female larger.
-
-
-28. Cathartidae: AMERICAN VULTURES.
-
-Large as a turkey, one species much larger; whole head and sometimes
-neck bare of feathers; eyes prominent; tail rounded. (Ridgway.)
-
-Food: carrion. Found sailing about in the air.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-References to the FIRST BOOK are indicated by ~1~; those to the SECOND
-BOOK by ~2~.
-
- Affections, ~1~, 78-82.
-
- Air-sacs, ~1~, 92, 94.
-
- Alaudidae, ~2~, 131, 202.
-
- Alcedinidae, ~2~, 170, 203.
-
- Ampelidae, ~2~, 63, 200.
-
- Arrival in spring, ~1~, 3, 4.
-
- Attraction and Protection of Birds, ~1~, 131-135.
-
- Audubon, John James, ~1~, 60.
-
- Auks, ~1~, 110.
-
-
- Barn Owl Family, ~2~, 185, 204.
-
- Beak, ~1~, 95-97.
-
- Blackbird, Brewer's, ~2~, 113.
-
- Blackbird, Crow, ~1~, 72; ~2~, 110.
-
- Blackbird, Red-winged, ~2~, 94;
- portrait, ~2~, 94.
-
- Blackbird Family, ~2~, 94, 201.
-
- Blackbirds, ~1~, 3, 126, 129.
-
- Bluebird, arrival, ~1~, 3;
- getting food for young, 17;
- teaching young to fly, 37, 38;
- feeding, 50; ~2~, 5;
- portrait, ~1~, 38.
-
- Bobolink, nest of, ~1~, 9;
- one of the first birds to stop singing in summer, 47;
- the fall migration, 61, 62.
-
- Bob-white (quail), ~1~, 44, 59.
-
- Body, shape of, ~1~, 91.
-
- Bolles, Frank, his pet owl, ~1~, 101, 116;
- his story of a heron, 103, 104.
-
- Bones, ~1~, 92, 94.
-
- Books about birds, ~1~, 142-144.
-
- Brooding, ~1~, 13-16.
-
- Bubonidae, ~2~, 178, 204.
-
- Bunting, Towhee, _or_ Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Bush-Tits, ~2~, 198.
-
- Butcher-birds, ~2~, 59.
-
- Buzzard, Turkey, ~1~, 50, 51; ~2~, 194.
-
-
- Canary, ~1~, 20, 57, 81.
-
- Caprimulgidae, ~2~, 155, 203.
-
- Cardinal, ~1~, 69, 132; ~2~, 88;
- portrait, ~2~, 90.
-
- Catbird, food of, ~1~, 49, 126;
- jerking the tail, 113; ~2~, 37, 125;
- portrait, ~2~, 36.
-
- Cathartidae, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
- Cave-dwelling Family, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Cedar-bird, feeding young, ~1~, 19;
- story of affection for young, 78;
- usefulness to man, 126, 129; ~2~, 63;
- portrait, ~1~, 126.
-
- Certhiidae, ~2~, 27, 198.
-
- Chat, Long-tailed, ~2~, 53.
-
- Chat, Yellow-breasted, ~2~, 52;
- portrait, ~2~, 52.
-
- Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Chickadee, defending eggs, ~1~, 11, 12;
- getting food for young, 18;
- as an eater of insects' eggs, 68, 126;
- affection for young, 78; ~2~, 22;
- portrait, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chickadee, Mountain, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chickadees, ~2~, 22.
-
- Chuck-will's-widow, ~2~, 157.
-
- Cinclidae, ~2~, 42, 199.
-
- Color in feathers, ~1~, 120.
- _See also_ Plumage.
-
- Cormorant, ~1~, 94.
-
- Corvidae, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
- Cowbird, ~2~, 51, 98.
-
- Creeper, Brown, ~2~, 27;
- portrait, ~2~, 28.
-
- Creeper Family, ~2~, 27, 198.
-
- Creepers, ~2~, 19.
-
- Crop, ~1~, 93.
-
- Crossbill, American _or_ Red, ~2~, 91.
-
- Crossbill, White-winged, ~2~, 92.
-
- Crossbills, ~1~, 97; ~2~, 91.
-
- Crow, American, punishing a young one, ~1~, 37;
- sleeping in flocks, 59, 60;
- story of an affectionate, 80;
- usefulness to men, 126; ~2~, 40, 117.
-
- Crow Family, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
- Cuckoo, Black-billed, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo, California, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo, Yellow-billed, ~2~, 174;
- portrait, ~2~, 174.
-
- Cuckoo Family, ~2~, 174, 203.
-
- Cuculidae, ~2~, 174, 203.
-
-
- Dipper, American, ~2~, 42;
- portrait, ~2~, 42.
-
- Dipper Family, ~2~, 42, 199.
-
- Down, the first plumage, ~1~, 15, 21, 22, 115.
-
- Ducks, ~1~, 97, 115.
-
-
- Eagle, Bald, ~2~, 189, 192.
-
- Ears, ~1~, 102-104.
-
- Eggs, beauty of, ~1~, 11;
- the mother's care, 11, 12;
- incubation and hatching of, 13-15.
-
- Eyes, ~1~, 100-102.
-
-
- Falconidae, ~2~, 188, 204.
-
- Feathers, first appearance on the young bird, ~1~, 22;
- of the wing, 109-111;
- of the tail, 112, 113;
- the various kinds of, 114, 115;
- expression of emotions by, 116;
- the birds' care of, 116, 117.
- _See also_ Plumage.
-
- Feet, ~1~, 92, 105-108.
-
- Finches, ~2~, 82, 201.
-
- Fish, birds and dead, ~1~, 86, 87.
-
- Flicker, method of feeding young, ~1~, 18;
- food of, 85, 127;
- color markings, 121; ~2~, 161;
- portrait, ~1~, 86.
-
- Flicker, Red-shafted, ~2~, 161, 162.
-
- Flycatcher, Least, ~2~, 136.
-
- Flycatcher, Shining Crested, ~2~, 67.
-
- Flycatching Family, ~2~, 135, 202.
-
- Flying, ~1~, 93.
-
- Food, ~1~, 48-55;
- in winter, 67-69, 134;
- in its relation to the welfare of man, 125-130.
-
- Frigate-bird, ~1~, 110.
-
- Fringillidae, ~2~, 80, 201.
-
-
- Geese, ~1~, 98, 99.
-
- Gizzard, ~1~, 93.
-
- Gnatcatcher, Blue-gray, ~2~, 16.
-
- Gnatcatchers, ~2~, 198.
-
- Goatsucker Family, ~2~, 155, 203.
-
- Goldfinch, American, ~1~, 14;
- story of canary and, 20;
- change of color, 26;
- food, 54;
- flocking, 71; ~2~, 82;
- portrait, ~1~, 26.
-
- Goldfinch, European, ~1~, 79.
-
- Goldfinch, Willow, ~2~, 84.
-
- Grackle, Bronzed, ~2~, 112.
-
- Grackle, Purple, ~2~, 112.
-
- Grackles, ~2~, 110.
-
- Grosbeak, Black-headed, ~2~, 88.
-
- Grosbeak, Cardinal, ~1~, 69, 132; ~2~, 88;
- portrait, ~2~, 90.
-
- Grosbeak, Rose-breasted, ~2~, 86;
- portrait, ~2~, 86.
-
- Grosbeaks, ~2~, 86.
-
- Grouse, ~1~, 58, 59, 110.
-
- Grouse, Ruffed, ~1~, 111.
-
- Gullet, ~1~, 93.
-
- Gulls, ~1~, 101.
-
-
- Hawk, American Sparrow, ~2~, 189;
- portrait, ~2~, 188.
-
- Hawk, Fish, ~2~, 190;
- portrait, ~2~, 192.
-
- Hawk and Eagle Family, ~2~, 188, 204.
-
- Hawks, food of, ~1~, 52, 53, 126, 127;
- asleep, 59;
- beaks of, 97;
- eyesight of, 101;
- feet of, 106.
-
- Heligoland, ~1~, 101.
-
- Heron, Great Blue, ~2~, 114.
-
- Herons, food of, ~1~, 53, 127;
- bills of, 97;
- story of the hearing of a heron, 103, 104;
- usefulness to man, 127.
-
- Hirundinidae, ~2~, 69, 201.
-
- Humming Family, ~2~, 143, 202.
-
- Hummingbird, Anna's, ~2~, 149.
-
- Hummingbird, Ruby-throated, absence of male from nest, ~1~, 16;
- method of feeding young, 18; ~2~, 144;
- portrait, ~1~, 18.
-
- Hummingbirds, ~1~, 15, 98.
-
-
- Icteridae, ~2~, 94, 201.
-
- Identification, ~1~, 137-141.
-
- Indigo-bird, ~1~, 47;
- portrait, ~1~, 46.
-
- Instinct, ~1~, 83.
-
- Intelligence, ~1~, 83-87.
-
-
- Japan, ~1~, 131.
-
- Jay, Blue, learning to fly, ~1~, 31, 32;
- storing food, 54;
- story of a mischievous, 55, 56;
- usefulness to man, 126; ~2~, 113, 121;
- portrait, ~2~, 122.
-
- Jay, Steller's, ~2~, 126.
-
- Jays, ~2~, 117, 202.
-
-
- Kindness of birds to one another, ~1~, 74-77.
-
- Kingbird, ~1~, 14, 129; ~2~, 113, 136;
- portrait, ~2~, 136.
-
- Kingbird, Arkansas, ~2~, 140.
-
- Kingfisher, Belted, ~2~, 170;
- portrait, ~2~, 170.
-
- Kingfisher Family, ~2~, 170, 203.
-
- Kingfishers, ~1~, 21, 115.
-
- Kinglet, Ruby-crowned, ~2~, 14;
- portrait, ~2~, 14.
-
- Kinglet and Gnatcatcher Family, ~2~, 14, 197.
-
-
- Language, ~1~, 43-47.
-
- Laniidae, ~2~, 59, 200.
-
- Lark, Desert Horned, portrait, ~2~, 132.
-
- Lark, Horned, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark, Old-Field. _See_ Meadowlark.
-
- Lark, Prairie Horned, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark, Shore, ~2~, 131.
-
- Lark Family, ~2~, 131, 202.
-
- Legs, ~1~, 92, 105, 107, 108.
-
-
- Magpie, American, ~2~, 126;
- portrait, ~2~, 126.
-
- Magpie, Yellow-billed, ~2~, 126.
-
- Magpies, ~2~, 117.
-
- Martin, Purple, ~2~, 72.
-
- Meadowlark, ~1~, 45, 119, 121; ~2~, 97, 100;
- portrait, ~2~, 100.
-
- Meadowlark, Western, ~2~, 102.
-
- Meadow Starlings, ~2~, 100.
-
- Micropodidae, ~2~, 150, 202.
-
- Migration, ~1~, 61-68.
-
- Mniotiltidae, ~2~, 49, 200.
-
- Mocking Thrushes, ~2~, 34, 199.
-
- Mockingbird, ~1~, 45; ~2~, 9, 34, 195.
-
- Motacillidae, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Moulting, ~1~, 25, 26, 118.
-
-
- Neck, ~1~, 92.
-
- Nests, situations of, ~1~, 9;
- materials of, 9, 10;
- building of, 10;
- seldom used more than once, 10, 11.
-
- Nighthawk, ~1~, 107; ~2~, 158;
- portrait, ~2~, 158.
-
- Norway, ~1~, 131.
-
- Nuthatch, European, ~2~, 21.
-
- Nuthatch, Red-breasted, ~2~, 20.
-
- Nuthatch, Slender-billed, ~2~, 18.
-
- Nuthatch, White-breasted, ~2~, 18;
- portrait, ~1~, 96.
-
- Nuthatch and Chickadee Family, ~2~, 18, 198.
-
- Nuthatches, ~1~, 18, 96, 98.
-
-
- Observation, ~1~, 137-141, 145.
-
- Oil, ~1~, 117.
-
- Oriole, Arizona Hooded, ~2~, 108.
-
- Oriole, Baltimore, nest of, ~1~, 9, 95; ~2~, 104;
- portrait, ~1~, 10.
-
- Oriole, Orchard, ~2~, 107.
-
- Orioles, getting food for young, ~1~, 18;
- teaching young to fly, 33, 34;
- food of, 50;
- affection for young, 78;
- usefulness to man, 129; ~2~, 104.
-
- Osprey, American, ~2~, 190;
- portrait, ~2~, 192.
-
- Ostrich, ~1~, 24.
-
- Ostrich, South American, ~1~, 24.
-
- Ouzel, Water, ~2~, 42;
- portrait, ~2~, 42.
-
- Oven-bird, ~2~, 52.
-
- Owl, American Barn, ~2~, 185.
-
- Owl, Barred, ~1~, 101.
-
- Owl, Burrowing, ~2~, 182.
-
- Owl, Florida Burrowing, ~2~, 182.
-
- Owl, Screech, ~2~, 180;
- portrait, ~2~, 180.
-
- Owl Family, ~2~, 178, 204.
-
- Owls, ~1~, 35;
- food of, 52, 53, 127;
- ears of, 103;
- feet of, 106;
- usefulness to man, 126, 127.
-
-
- Paridae, ~2~, 18, 198.
-
- Penguin, ~1~, 72.
-
- Petrel, ~1~, 110.
-
- Pewee, Western Wood, ~2~, 142.
-
- Pewee, Wood, ~1~, 47; ~2~, 136, 140.
-
- Phainopepla, ~2~, 67.
-
- Phoebe, ~1~, 35; ~2~, 136.
-
- Picidae, ~2~, 160, 203.
-
- Pigeons, ~1~, 79, 80.
-
- Pipit, Sprague's, ~2~, 46;
- portrait, ~2~, 46.
-
- Pipits, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Plumage, the nestling, ~1~, 22, 23;
- coloration of, 23, 24, 27, 28;
- moulting, 25, 26, 118;
- change of color without moulting, 26, 27, 118-120;
- protective coloration of, 120, 121;
- recognition marks in, 121, 122.
-
- Poor-will, ~2~, 157.
-
- Protection and attraction of birds, ~1~, 131-135.
-
-
- Quail (bob-white), ~1~, 44, 59.
-
-
- Redbird, ~2~, 88.
-
- Redstart, American, ~1~, 14;
- portrait, ~1~, 14.
-
- Regurgitation, ~1~, 18, 19.
-
- Rhea, ~1~, 24.
-
- Robin, American, arrival, ~1~, 3, 10, 15, 17, 18, 21;
- plumage of young, 23, 34;
- teaching young to bathe, 38, 39;
- notes of, 44, 45;
- food of, 49, 126, 127;
- roosting in flocks, 60;
- devotion to young, 78;
- story of the intelligence of a, 84, 102;
- usefulness to men, 126, 127, 129; ~2~, 5, 6, 38, 65, 167;
- portrait, ~2~, 60.
-
- Robin, Western, ~2~, 6.
-
-
- Sapsucker, Yellow-bellied, ~1~, 85.
-
- Sapsuckers, tail of, ~1~, 113; ~2~, 161.
-
- Scavenger Family, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
- Shrike, Loggerhead, ~2~, 59;
- portrait, ~2~, 60.
-
- Shrike Family, ~2~, 59, 200.
-
- Shrikes, ~1~, 126.
-
- Skylark, Missouri, ~2~, 46.
-
- Skylark, Prairie, ~2~, 46.
-
- Sleeping, ~1~, 57-60.
-
- Song, ~1~, 14, 44-47.
-
- Sparrow, Chipping, ~1~, 54.
-
- Sparrow, English, learning canary's song, ~1~, 46;
- young fed by a wren, 81, 82;
- harmfulness of, 126, 130, 132; ~2~, 32.
-
- Sparrow, Song, arrival, ~1~, 3;
- nest, 9;
- individuality in songs, 45, 47; ~2~, 81.
-
- Sparrow, Tree, ~1~, 58, 128.
-
- Sparrow, White-throated, ~1~, 54.
-
- Sparrow and Finch Family, ~2~, 80, 201.
-
- Sparrows, ~1~, 84, 97; ~2~, 80.
-
- Starlings, Meadow, ~2~, 100.
-
- Stomach, ~1~, 93.
-
- Strigidae, ~2~, 185, 204.
-
- Swallow, Bank, ~1~, 96.
-
- Swallow, Barn, ~1~, 71, 96; ~2~, 69;
- portrait, _frontispiece_.
-
- Swallow, Cliff _or_ Eave, ~1~, 71; ~2~, 72, 73.
-
- Swallow Family, ~2~, 69, 201.
-
- Swallows, food of, ~1~, 17, 35, 50;
- flocking, 62, 71;
- story of young, 75;
- story showing intelligence, 85;
- wings of, 110.
-
- Swift, Chimney, sleeping, ~1~, 59, 60;
- devotion to young, 78;
- tail of, 113; ~2~, 150.
-
- Swift, Vaux's, ~2~, 150, 152.
-
- Swift Family, ~2~, 150, 202.
-
- Sylviidae, ~2~, 14, 197.
-
-
- Tail, ~1~, 112, 113.
-
- Tanager, Louisiana, ~2~, 78.
-
- Tanager, Scarlet, ~1~, 79; ~2~, 75;
- portraits, ~1~, 142; ~2~, 76.
-
- Tanager, Summer, ~2~, 78.
-
- Tanager Family, ~2~, 75, 201.
-
- Tanagridae, ~2~, 75, 201.
-
- Thrasher, Arizona, ~2~, 41.
-
- Thrasher, Brown, ~1~, 113; ~2~, 40;
- portrait, 112.
-
- Thrush, Brown. _See_ Thrasher, Brown.
-
- Thrush, Golden-crowned, ~2~, 52.
-
- Thrush, Hermit, ~2~, 11;
- portrait, ~2~, 10.
-
- Thrush, Western Hermit, ~2~, 11.
-
- Thrush, Wood, ~1~, 133.
-
- Thrush Family, ~2~, 5, 197.
-
- Thrushes, Mocking, ~2~, 34, 199.
-
- Titlarks, ~2~, 46.
-
- Titmice, ~2~, 22, 198.
-
- Titmouse, Tufted, ~2~, 24.
-
- Tongue, ~1~, 97, 98.
-
- Towhee, _or_ Chewink, ~1~, 76, 77; ~2~, 84;
- portrait, ~1~, 76.
-
- Towhee, Spurred, ~2~, 84.
-
- Trochilidae, ~2~, 143, 202.
-
- Troglodytidae, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Turdidae, ~2~, 5, 197.
-
- Tyrannidae, ~2~, 135, 202.
-
-
- Usefulness of birds to man, ~1~, 125-130.
-
-
- Veery, ~1~, 47.
-
- Vireo, Red-eyed, ~1~, 47.
-
- Vireo, Warbling, ~2~, 57.
-
- Vireo, Western Warbling, ~2~, 57.
-
- Vireo, Yellow-throated, ~2~, 56, 57;
- portrait, ~2~, 56.
-
- Vireo Family, ~2~, 55, 200.
-
- Vireonidae, ~2~, 55, 200.
-
- Vulture, Turkey, _or_ Turkey Buzzard, ~1~, 50, 51; ~2~, 194.
-
- Vultures, American, ~2~, 194, 204.
-
-
- Wagtail Family, ~2~, 46, 199.
-
- Warbler, Black and White, ~1~, 121;
- portrait, ~1~, 120.
-
- Warbler, Yellow, ~1~, 50; ~2~, 50.
-
- Warbler Family, ~2~, 49, 200.
-
- Warblers, ~1~, 62, 97.
-
- Water, birds in, ~1~, 94;
- for drinking and bathing, 133, 134.
-
- Water-Thrush, ~2~, 52.
-
- Water-Thrush, Louisiana, ~2~, 52.
-
- Waxwing, Cedar. _See_ Cedar-bird.
-
- Waxwing Family, ~2~, 63, 200.
-
- Whip-poor-will, ~1~, 107, 121; ~2~, 155.
-
- Whip-poor-will, Nuttall's, ~2~, 157.
-
- Wings, ~1~, 109-112.
-
- Winter, birds in, ~1~, 66-69.
-
- Woodcock, beak of, ~1~, 96;
- whistling sound of wings, 111.
-
- Woodpecker, Californian, ~2~, 167.
-
- Woodpecker, Downy, ~1~, 50; ~2~, 169;
- portrait, ~2~, 166.
-
- Woodpecker, Golden-winged. _See_ Flicker.
-
- Woodpecker, Red-headed, ~1~, 85; ~2~, 165.
-
- Woodpecker, Yellow-bellied, ~1~, 85.
-
- Woodpecker Family, ~2~, 160, 203.
-
- Woodpeckers, ~1~, 18, 21;
- teaching young to feed itself, 35, 36;
- food of, 50;
- storing food, 54, 55;
- sleeping, 59, 85, 86;
- beaks of, 95;
- tongues of, 98, 103;
- feet of, 106;
- tails of, 113; ~2~, 19.
-
- Wren, House, ~1~, 81, 82; ~2~, 31;
- portrait, ~1~, 80.
-
- Wren, Western House, ~2~, 31.
-
- Wrens, ~2~, 30, 199.
-
- Wren-Tits, ~2~, 198.
-
-
- Young birds, hatching of, ~1~, 13-15;
- feeding of, 16-20;
- first plumage of, 21-23;
- learning to fly, 29-34, 37-39;
- the mother's anxiety about, 30-32;
- learning to feed themselves, 34-36, 39;
- learning to sing, 36;
- after leaving the nest, 70-73.
-
-
- The Riverside Press
- CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
- U . S . A
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Book 2:
-
-Page 173, "halycon" changed to "halcyon" (called halcyon days)
-
-Page 212, book number was added to Woodcock.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Children's Book of Birds, by
-Olive Thorne Miller
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