The Oologist. 



VOL. XIX. NO. 2. ALBION. N. Y.. FEBRUARY, 1902. 



Whole No. 185 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 

 TAXIDERMY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and items of interest to the 

 Btudent of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

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Nesting- of the Brown Creeper. 



The Brown Creeper (Certhia famil- 

 iaris americana) is not a rare bird in 

 this locality, yet can hardly be called 

 common. Though this bird is not con- 

 sidered regularly migratory it moves 



southward in the fall, and is rare or 

 absent in this locality from the 1st of 

 November to the 15th of March. 



This migratory movement may be a 

 partial one like that of the Crow, the 

 bird wintering a little further south. I 

 saw one in a yard in the city of Walt- 

 ham, Mass., the 4th of Dec, '95, where 

 it made a short stop as it was promptly 

 driven out bv the ever-present English 

 Sparrow. It is a rather solitary bird, 

 usually staying in the old woods where 

 it may be seen ascending the trunks of 

 the large tree3 usually in a spiral 

 course, all the while busily examining 

 the crevices in the bark for insects or 

 their larvae. Its ascent is rapid, con- 

 sidering the extent of its search, and 

 is accomplished by upward hops as 

 a Woodpecker ascends, but the motion 

 is so smooth and easy that the bird 

 seems to almost glide up the trunk. 

 When the bird has ascended as high as 

 it wishes, it invariably takes wing, to 

 alight at the base of the same or an ad- 

 joining tree for another ascent, never 

 hanging head downwards as the Nut- 

 hatches do. 



It is frequently found in company with 

 Chickadees, Nuthatches and Downy 

 Woodpeckers, but it is probably a sim- 

 ilarity of food rather than social aspir- 

 atio; s oa the part of the Creeper that 

 is the cause of their being found to- 

 gether. Usually nut more than two 

 birds are seen at one time, but occi- 

 sionally in the fall the parent birds and 

 their - brood are seen together. The 

 Creeper is little noted fur its musical 

 ability, for, though it has a sweet song 

 it is so rarely uttered that but f«w have 

 ever beard it. I have heard the song 

 but once. It was one of those morn- 

 ings, bright with the promises of comiDg 



