'62 Director s Annual Report. 



ridge, it would, in all probabilit}' be gone from sight and forever. 

 I pulled the trigger and, to my consternation my gun missed fire. 

 It was after all little wonder that gun and ammunition failed me, 

 for both had been soaking wet for three days. The next few sec- 

 onds were moments of painful indecision. To break and reload 

 my gun would surely frighten the bird ; to use the heavy charge 

 in the left barrel was almost criminal, but my only recourse. With- 

 out further delay I availed myself of the first opportunity when the 

 bird was screened by limbs and fired. The feathers flew : my first 

 Black Mamo had been shot. vShot, but not found. "x\ bird in 

 the hand" in the Hawaiian forests, is worth several in the bush, 

 especially the bush in Molokai. Though the bird was not more 

 than twenty-five feet from me when I fired, and my man and I both 

 saw it start to fall, we searched for it in vain for three-quarters of 

 an hour. We looked carefully under the vines and ferns, among 

 the undergrowth in the trees, in fact everywhere for it, even sein- 

 ing a pool of water that had coUedted in the rocks a little farther 

 below, 3^et not a sign of the coveted Hoa could we find. I had 

 almost given up all hope of finding it, and began to save the few 

 scattered feathers lying about, feeling that my claim to having 

 found the rare bird would have to rest on such evidence as they 

 could furnish. 



As the search grew more hopeless, ni}- native, who had assured 

 me in the morning that he had heard of the Hoa, but had never 

 seen such a bird as I described it to be, now became more earnest, 

 as he declared to me that the bird just shot was not the Oo — the 

 only other black bird known to him. As he was able to give the 

 points wherein it differed from that now almost equally rare spe- 

 cies, I felt his remarks were valuable as a convincing commentary 

 on the scarcity of this bird. Here w^as a native hunter, familiar 

 with the teachings of his fathers, whose knowledge of the forest 

 had been gained almost half a century before, who knew not only 

 the native names and uses of almost every plant we saw, but the 

 names and habits of all the native birds, save this one, declaring 

 it to be unknown to him. Yet we who understand something of 

 Nature's processes, know that the Hoa has been for ages inhabiting 

 these mountains, not six miles distant from, and in sight of the place 

 where this man was born., and where he had lived all his life. 



