534 LAND BIRDS 



California Breeding Range : Along the Sierra Nevada from Mt. Shasta 



south to Mt. Whitney. 

 Breeding Season : May and June. 

 Nest : On the ground ; composed of leaves, bark strips, and weed sterns ; 



lined with finer materials of the same kinds. 

 Eggs : 3 to 5 ; white, spotted with reddish brown and lavender, in a 



wreath around the larger end. Size 0.64 X 0.45. 



The Calaveras Warbler may be said to correspond to 

 the Nashville warbler of the Eastern States. In Cali- 

 fornia it is a haunter of the brush-covered hillsides, hid- 

 ing shyly in the scrubby undergrowth and singing from 

 the concealment of the deer brush and chaparral. iNIr. 

 Chester A. Barlow writes briefly in "The Condor," 

 November, 1901, of its occurrence in the Sierra Nevada: 

 "Although the species is far from rare in numbers, it 

 appears tliat but comparatively few of its nests have 

 been taken; but this is not strange when we consider 

 the nature and extent of the country selected for nesting 

 sites. It is usually by the merest chance that a nest is 

 discovered, as successful a method as any being to beat 

 through the ' mountain misery ' in the vicinity of where 

 the male bird is found singing. On June 9, 1899, I 

 flushed a Calaveras Warbler from her nest in tarweed 

 beneath a small cedar at Fyffe, California, at which date 

 the nest held five half-grown young. On June 10, 1901, 

 at Slippery Ford, California, a nest was found built 

 among an accunmlation of dry black oak leaves beneath 

 a deer brush on the side of a gulch. It contained five 

 eggs, two-thirds advanced in incubation." 



