TIMES OF MIGRATION. 53 



one may tramp the woods for miles without seeing a 

 dozen birds. 



September is the month of Warblers. They come in 

 myriads during the latter half of the month, and on 

 favorable nights we may sometimes hear their fine- voiced 

 Ueep^ as they fly by overhead. About the 25th of the 

 month our winter residents, the Junco, Winter Wren, 

 Golden Kinglet, and Brown Ci*eeper, will arrive. 



The summer residents are now rapidly leaving us. 

 In a general way it may be said that the last birds to 

 arrive in the spring are the first to leave in the fall, 

 while the earliest spring migrants remain the longest. 



October and November are the months of Sparrows. 

 They rise in loose flocks from every stubble or weed 

 field, and seek shelter in the bordering bushy growth. 

 Should the season prove warm, many of these hardy 

 seed-eaters will stay with us well into December, but at 

 the first really cold weather they retreat southward. 



This completes the merest outline of the move- 

 ments of our migratory l)irds. It will be seen that in 

 reality there are but few periods during the year when 

 some event is not occurring in the bird world. As we 

 accumulate records for comparison, and learn to appre- 

 ciate their meaning, our interest in the study of migra- 

 tion will increase and be renewed with the changing 

 seasons. 



We have found, in this brief re\'iew, that our birds 

 may be placed in four classes, as follows : 



1. Permcvnent Residents. — Birds that are represented 

 in the same locality throughout the year. 



2. Summer Residents. — Birds that come to us in the 

 spring, rear their young, and depart in the fall. 



3. Wititer Residents. — Birds that come from the north 

 in the fall, pass the winter with us, and return to their 

 more northern homes in the spring. 



