BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS 75 



off my eyes ; they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles, descending and ascending, with- 

 out giving a single flap." (Jne which he shot measured, from tip to tip of the fully expanded 

 wings. 8>-2 feet. 



The condor, like its smaller relatives, hunts by sight, and not, as was at one time believed, 

 by smell, feeding on the dead bodies of guanacos which have died a natural death or been 

 killed by pumas, and upon other dead animals. In the neighbourhood where sheep and goats 

 are kept, they are much dreaded, as they will attack the young kids and lambs. The flock- 

 owners on this account wage constant war against them, capturing them by enclosing a carcase 

 within a narrow space, and wheji the condors are gorged galloping up on horseback and killing 

 them, for when this bird has not space to run it cannot rise from the ground. Sometimes the 

 trees on which they roost are marked, and when night falls a man climbs the tree and cap- 

 tures them with a noose, for thev are very heavy sleepers. 



The condor ranges from the .A^ndes of Ecuador. Peru, and Chili southwards to the Rio 

 Negro on the east coast of Patagonia. It lays two large white eggs on a shelf of bare rock 

 projecting from precipitous cliffs, and the young are said to be unable to fly till after they are 

 a year old. As will lie seen in the photographs, the head of the male is crowned by a bare, 

 fleshy caruncle, which, like the surrounding bare skin, is of a dull reddish colour: lower down 

 the neck is a frill of ]nire white down, which forms a conspicuous contrast with the glossy 

 black plumage of the rest of the body and wings. 



The Sf.cret.\rv-bird. 



The second of the three main divisions into which the Pjirds of Prey are divided is reserved 

 for the Sf.cret.\ry-bird. This bird derives its name from the crest of long feathers which bear 

 a fanciful resemblance to the quill-pens a clerk is supposed to stick above his ear. It differs 

 from all the other members of the Hawk Tribe in the exceedingly long legs, which in the young 

 are said to he so fragile as to fracture if the bird is suddenly alarmed. It feeds chieflv on 

 insects and reptiles, especially snakes, for which last it seems to have a special liking. It attacks 

 even the most venomous species, striking at them with its powerful wings and pounding them 

 with its feet, jumping upon them with great force, till rendered helpless, when they are at once 

 swallowed head-foremost. On account of its great value as a snake-eater it has been accorded 

 special protection, though unfortunately there is a tendencv on the part of English settlers to 

 relax this, on account of the fact that it will occasionally eat animals coming within the scope of 

 "game." \"aluable as the latter may be. there yet seems no justification for such a course. 



The secretary-bird, which is a South African species, though extending northwards as far 

 as Abyssinia, builds a huge nest of sticks in low bushes, under which will often be found 

 numerous nests of the Cape sparrow, apparently the only available site on the veldt, where 

 bushes are scarce. Here the sparrows are efficiently protected from the icy winds which so 

 frequently sweep across this region, and apparently suft'er no fear of personal violence from 

 the fierce owners of the domicile above them. When sitting, the female secretary' is fed by 

 her mate. The young do not appear to leave the nest for five or six months. They are 

 frequently taken from the nest and brought up as household pets, becoming not only very 

 tame, but exceedingly useful. 



The E.\gle and F.\lcon Tribe. 



From the perplexing wealth of species displayed among the forms herein bracketed 

 together, we can only select a few examples, which embrace, however, all the more important 

 and interesting forms. 



Beginning with the more lowly, we start with those members of small or medium size 

 known as Kites, and as an example of the group take the species known in the British 

 Islands as the Kite, or Gle.^d. In former days this bird was extremely common in England, 



